4.5 Article

Salamanders reveal novel trajectories of amphibian MHC evolution

期刊

EVOLUTION
卷 76, 期 10, 页码 2436-2449

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/evo.14601

关键词

Amphibians; copy number variation; major histocompatibility complex; positive selection; Urodela

资金

  1. Polish National Science Centre [2016/23/B/NZ8/00738]

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This study provides extensive analysis on MHC class I in salamanders, revealing extreme diversity in both sequence and architecture. The study also identifies differences in positive selection signals and highlights the similarities between salamanders and distant vertebrate lineages in terms of MHC-I structure. Additionally, evidence of intraexonic recombination and the influence of life history traits on MHC-I expansion/contraction is presented.
Genes of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) code for immune proteins that are crucial for pathogen recognition in vertebrates. MHC research in nonmodel taxa has long been hampered by its genomic complexity that makes the locus-specific genotyping challenging. The recent progress in sequencing and genotyping methodologies allows an extensive phylogenetic coverage in studies of MHC evolution. Here, we analyzed the peptide-binding region of MHC class I (MHC-I) in 30 species of salamanders from six families representative of Urodela phylogeny. This extensive dataset revealed an extreme diversity of MHC-I in salamanders, both in terms of sequence diversity (about 3000 variants) and architecture (2-22 gene copies per species). The signal of positive selection was moderate and consistent between both peptide-binding domains, but varied greatly between genera. Positions of positively selected sites mostly coincided with human peptide-binding sites, suggesting similar structural properties of MHC-I molecules across distant vertebrate lineages. Finally, we provided evidence for the common intraexonic recombination at MHC-I and for the role of life history traits in the processes of MHC-I expansion/contraction. Our study revealed novel evolutionary trajectories of amphibian MHC and it contributes to the understanding of the mechanisms that generated extraordinary MHC diversity throughout vertebrate evolution.

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