Abstract

Natural selection, the most important force in evolution, comes in three forms. Negative purifying selection removes deleterious variation and maintains adaptations. Positive directional selection fixes beneficial variants, producing new adaptations. Balancing selection maintains variation in a population. Important mechanisms of balancing selection include heterozygote advantage, frequency-dependent advantage of rarity, and local and fluctuating episodic selection. A rare pathogen gains an advantage because host defenses are predominantly effective against prevalent types. Similarly, a rare immune variant gives its host an advantage because the prevalent pathogens cannot escape the host’s apostatic defense. Due to the stochastic nature of evolution, neutral variation may accumulate on genealogical branches, but trans-species polymorphisms are rare under neutrality and are strong evidence for balancing selection. Balanced polymorphism maintains diversity at the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) in vertebrates. The Atlantic cod is missing genes for both MHC-II and CD4, vital parts of the adaptive immune system. Nevertheless, cod are healthy in their ecological niche, maintaining large populations that support major commercial fisheries. Innate immunity is of interest from an evolutionary perspective, particularly in taxa lacking adaptive immunity. Here, we analyze extensive amino acid and nucleotide polymorphisms of the cathelicidin gene family in Atlantic cod and closely related taxa. There are three major clusters, Cath1, Cath2, and Cath3, that we consider to be paralogous genes. There is extensive nucleotide and amino acid allelic variation between and within clusters. The major feature of the results is that the variation clusters by alleles and not by species in phylogenetic trees and discriminant analysis of principal components. Variation within the three groups shows trans-species polymorphism that is older than speciation and that is suggestive of balancing selection maintaining the variation. Using Bayesian and likelihood methods positive and negative selection is evident at sites in the conserved part of the genes and, to a larger extent, in the active part which also shows episodic diversifying selection, further supporting the argument for balancing selection.

Highlights

  • Vertebrates fight microbial infections using both innate immunity and adaptive responses

  • Our understanding of balancing selection will be much improved by these new data, and important insights will be gained from genetic data without embarking on functional studies (Charlesworth, 2006)

  • We have found trans-species polymorphisms of the cathelicidin genes and their alleles of Atlantic cod and closely related taxa that are akin to the human vs. chimpanzee major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-II (Fan et al, 1989)

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Summary

Introduction

Vertebrates fight microbial infections using both innate immunity and adaptive responses. MHC molecules, cell surface molecules with broad (MHC-I) and specialized (MHC-II) pathogen recognition features (Murphy, Travers & Walport, 2007), show trans-species polymorphisms, variation indicative of adaptive balancing selection. Depending on recombination, the size of the genomic region can be quite short, making trans-species polymorphism hard to detect. Obvious and pervasive trans-species polymorphism, in contrast, is most likely due either to multiple sites under balancing selection or to suppression of recombination or to both (Wiuf et al, 2004). With the wealth of genomic data currently being generated, it is evident that many selective effects are related to immune defenses (Nielsen et al, 2007; Quintana-Murci & Clark, 2013; Teixeira et al, 2014; Osborne et al, 2013). Our understanding of balancing selection will be much improved by these new data, and important insights will be gained from genetic data without embarking on functional studies (Charlesworth, 2006)

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