No evidence of prenatal diversifying selection at locus or supertype levels in the dog MHC class II loci.

Canine Genet Epidemiol

Department of Genetics and Physiology, University of Oulu, PO Box 3000, Oulu, FIN-90014 Finland.

Published: November 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how genetic diversity in the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) of domestic dogs may be influenced by prenatal selection mechanisms.
  • Researchers analyzed 110 dog families and found no significant deviations in expected offspring genotypes, except for a specific peptide-binding site in the DLA-DRB1 locus, which showed increased heterozygosity.
  • The findings suggest that post-copulatory selection may play a role in maintaining MHC diversity, but the overall impact of prenatal selection is estimated to be low, indicating other factors may also contribute significantly to genetic diversity in MHC loci.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite decades of studying, the mechanisms maintaining high diversity in the genes of the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) are still puzzling scientists. In addition to pathogen recognition and other functions, MHC molecules may act prenatally in mate choice and in maternal-foetal interactions. These interactions are potential selective mechanisms that increase genetic diversity in the MHC. During pregnancy, immune response has a dual role: the foetus represents foreign tissue compared to mother, but histo-incompatibility is required for successful pregnancy. We have studied the prenatal selection in MHC class II loci (DLA-DQA1, DLA-DQB1 and DLA-DRB1) in domestic dogs by comparing the observed and expected offspring genotype proportions in 110 dog families. Several potential selection targets were addressed, including the peptide-binding site, the MHC locus, three-locus haplotype and supertype levels. For the supertype analysis, the first canine supertype classification was created based on analysis of peptide-binding amino-acid polymorphism.

Results: In most loci and levels, no deviation from the expected genotype frequencies was observed. However, one peptide-binding site in DLA-DRB1 had an excess of heterozygotes among the offspring. In addition, if the father shared a DLA-DRB1 allele with the mother, that allele was inherited by the offspring more frequently than expected, suggesting the selective advantage of a histo-compatible foetus, in contrast to our expectations.

Conclusions: We conclude that there is some evidence of post-copulatory selection at nucleotide site level in the MHC loci of pet dogs. But due to no indication of selection at locus, three-locus, or supertype levels, we estimated that the prenatal selection coefficient is less than 0.3 in domestic dogs and very likely other factors are more important in maintaining the genetic diversity in MHC loci.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5116190PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40575-016-0038-9DOI Listing

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