1. Genetic variation in the major histocompatibility complex of the European brown hare (Lepus europaeus) across distinct phylogeographic areas.
- Author
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Koutsogiannouli EA, Moutou KA, Stamatis C, Walter L, and Mamuris Z
- Subjects
- Alleles, Animals, DNA, Mitochondrial genetics, DNA, Mitochondrial immunology, Europe, Evolution, Molecular, Gene Frequency, HLA-DQ alpha-Chains classification, HLA-DQ alpha-Chains immunology, HLA-DRB1 Chains classification, HLA-DRB1 Chains immunology, Hares immunology, Inheritance Patterns, Microsatellite Repeats immunology, Phylogeography, Genetic Variation immunology, HLA-DQ alpha-Chains genetics, HLA-DRB1 Chains genetics, Hares genetics, Phylogeny
- Abstract
The major histocompatibility complex is one of the best studied systems in vertebrates providing evidence for the long-term action of selection. Here, we examined the intra- and inter-population genetic diversity of the MHC class II DRB locus in European brown hare (Lepus europaeus) and correlated the results with genetic variability already estimated from the MHC DQA locus and from maternally (mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)) and biparentally (allozymes, microsatellites) inherited loci. L. europaeus showed remarkable genetic polymorphism in both DQA and DRB1 loci. The Anatolian populations exhibited the highest genetic polymorphism for both loci. Balancing selection has established increased variability in the European populations despite the founder effects after the last glaciation. Different evolutionary rates were traced for DRB1 and DQA loci, as evidenced by the higher number of common DRB1 than DQA alleles and the greater differences between DRB1 alleles with common origin in comparison with DQA alleles. The high number of rare alleles with low frequencies detected implies that frequency-dependent selection drives MHC evolution in the brown hare through the advantage of rare alleles. Both loci were under the influence of positive selection within the peptide-binding region. The functional polymorphism, recorded as amino acid substitutions within the binding pockets, fell also within distinct geographic patterns, yet it was much narrower than the genetic polymorphism. We hypothesize that certain structural and functional characteristics of the binding pockets set limitations to the actual shape of genetic polymorphism in MHC.
- Published
- 2014
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