Abstract

In order to understand the variations of genomic organization of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) and provide data for the studies on disease resistance of avian species, the MHC class II polymorphism in Chinese Z-goose was investigated for the first time in the present study. Eight alleles, which probably came from different loci, were found in six different geese with only one obvious band in the restriction fragment length polymorphism data. The numbers of nonsynonymous substitutions (dN) in peptide binding region of exon 2 were higher than that of synonymous substitutions (dS), and no stop codons or frameshift mutations were found in this region, indicating that balance selection was in operation, and the sequences are not likely to be pseudogenes. In addition, we successfully obtained five different long MHC class II fragments (about 1,162 bp) in six geese and found that the length of intron 1 was longer than that in chicken and some other birds, but intron 2 seemed to be intermediate in length. The phylogenetic tree appeared to branch in an order consistent with accepted evolutionary pathway.

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