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Genetic variation of the MHC class II DRB genes in the Japanese weasel,Mustela itatsi, endemic to Japan, compared with the Siberian weasel,Mustela sibirica

Authors :
Kazuhisa Yamazaki
Yoshinori Nishita
Yayoi Kaneko
Liang-Kong Lin
Alexei V. Abramov
Ryuichi Masuda
Pavel A. Kosintsev
Shigeki Watanabe
Source :
Tissue Antigens. 86:431-442
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes encode proteins that play a critical role in vertebrate immune system and are highly polymorphic. To further understand the molecular evolution of the MHC genes, we compared MHC class II DRB genes between the Japanese weasel (Mustela itatsi), a species endemic to Japan, and the Siberian weasel (Mustela sibirica), a closely related species on the continent. We sequenced a 242-bp region of DRB exon 2, which encodes antigen-binding sites (ABS), and found 24 alleles from 31 M. itatsi individuals and 17 alleles from 21 M. sibirica individuals, including broadly distributed, species-specific and/or geographically restricted alleles. Our results suggest that pathogen-driven balancing selection have acted to maintain the diversity in the DRB genes. For predicted ABS, nonsynonymous substitutions exceeded synonymous substitutions, also indicating positive selection, which was not seen at non-ABS. In a Bayesian phylogenetic tree, two M. sibirica DRB alleles were basal to the rest of the sequences from mustelid species and may represent ancestral alleles. Trans-species polymorphism was evident between many mustelid DRB alleles, especially between M. itatsi and M. sibirica. These two Mustela species divided about 1.7 million years ago, but still share many MHC alleles, indicative of their close phylogenetic relationship.

Details

ISSN :
00012815
Volume :
86
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Tissue Antigens
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7dd362f179abf443c25b3e4ea2cd299f