Variation in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I of the European bison was characterized in a sample of 99 individuals using both classical cloning/Sanger sequencing and 454 pyrosequencing. Three common (frequencies: 0.348, 0.328, and 0.283) haplotypes contain 1-3 classical class I loci. A variable and difficult to estimate precisely number of nonclassical transcribed loci, pseudogenes, and/or gene fragments were also found. The presence of additional 2 rare haplotypes (frequency of 0.020 each), observed only in heterozygotes, was inferred. The overall organization of MHC I appears similar to the cattle system, but genetic variation is much lower with only 7 classical class I alleles, approximately one-tenth of the number known in cattle and a quarter known in the American bison. An extensive transspecific polymorphism was found. MHC I is in a strong linkage disequilibrium with previously studied MHC II DRB3 gene. The most likely explanation for the low variation is a drastic bottleneck at the beginning of the 20th century. Genotype frequencies conformed to Hardy-Weinberg expectations, and no signatures of selection in contemporary populations but strong signatures of historical positive selection in sequences of classical alleles were found. A quick and reliable method of MHC I genotyping was developed.
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