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Ancient and Recent Selective Pressures Shaped Genetic Diversity at AIM2-Like Nucleic Acid Sensors

AIM2-like receptors (ALRs) are a family of nucleic acid sensors essential for innate immune responses against viruses and bacteria. We performed an evolutionary analysis of ALR genes (MNDA, PYHIN1, IFI16, and AIM2) by analyzing inter- and intraspecies diversity. Maximum-likelihood analyses indicated...

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Autores principales: Cagliani, Rachele, Forni, Diego, Biasin, Mara, Comabella, Manuel, Guerini, Franca R., Riva, Stefania, Pozzoli, Uberto, Agliardi, Cristina, Caputo, Domenico, Malhotra, Sunny, Montalban, Xavier, Bresolin, Nereo, Clerici, Mario, Sironi, Manuela
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4007548/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24682156
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evu066
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author Cagliani, Rachele
Forni, Diego
Biasin, Mara
Comabella, Manuel
Guerini, Franca R.
Riva, Stefania
Pozzoli, Uberto
Agliardi, Cristina
Caputo, Domenico
Malhotra, Sunny
Montalban, Xavier
Bresolin, Nereo
Clerici, Mario
Sironi, Manuela
author_facet Cagliani, Rachele
Forni, Diego
Biasin, Mara
Comabella, Manuel
Guerini, Franca R.
Riva, Stefania
Pozzoli, Uberto
Agliardi, Cristina
Caputo, Domenico
Malhotra, Sunny
Montalban, Xavier
Bresolin, Nereo
Clerici, Mario
Sironi, Manuela
author_sort Cagliani, Rachele
collection PubMed
description AIM2-like receptors (ALRs) are a family of nucleic acid sensors essential for innate immune responses against viruses and bacteria. We performed an evolutionary analysis of ALR genes (MNDA, PYHIN1, IFI16, and AIM2) by analyzing inter- and intraspecies diversity. Maximum-likelihood analyses indicated that IFI16 and AIM2 evolved adaptively in primates, with branch-specific selection at the catarrhini lineage for IFI16. Application of a population genetics–phylogenetics approach also allowed identification of positive selection events in the human lineage. Positive selection in primates targeted sites located at the DNA-binding interface in both IFI16 and AIM2. In IFI16, several sites positively selected in primates and in the human lineage were located in the PYD domain, which is involved in protein–protein interaction and is bound by a human cytomegalovirus immune evasion protein. Finally, positive selection was found to target nuclear localization signals in IFI16 and the spacer region separating the two HIN domains. Population genetic analysis in humans revealed that an IFI16 genic region has been a target of long-standing balancing selection, possibly acting on two nonsynonymous polymorphisms located in the spacer region. Data herein indicate that ALRs have been repeatedly targeted by natural selection. The balancing selection region in IFI16 carries a variant with opposite risk effect for distinct autoimmune diseases, suggesting antagonistic pleiotropy. We propose that the underlying scenario is the result of an ancestral and still ongoing host–pathogen arms race and that the maintenance of susceptibility alleles for autoimmune diseases at IFI16 represents an evolutionary trade-off.
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spelling pubmed-40075482014-05-02 Ancient and Recent Selective Pressures Shaped Genetic Diversity at AIM2-Like Nucleic Acid Sensors Cagliani, Rachele Forni, Diego Biasin, Mara Comabella, Manuel Guerini, Franca R. Riva, Stefania Pozzoli, Uberto Agliardi, Cristina Caputo, Domenico Malhotra, Sunny Montalban, Xavier Bresolin, Nereo Clerici, Mario Sironi, Manuela Genome Biol Evol Research Article AIM2-like receptors (ALRs) are a family of nucleic acid sensors essential for innate immune responses against viruses and bacteria. We performed an evolutionary analysis of ALR genes (MNDA, PYHIN1, IFI16, and AIM2) by analyzing inter- and intraspecies diversity. Maximum-likelihood analyses indicated that IFI16 and AIM2 evolved adaptively in primates, with branch-specific selection at the catarrhini lineage for IFI16. Application of a population genetics–phylogenetics approach also allowed identification of positive selection events in the human lineage. Positive selection in primates targeted sites located at the DNA-binding interface in both IFI16 and AIM2. In IFI16, several sites positively selected in primates and in the human lineage were located in the PYD domain, which is involved in protein–protein interaction and is bound by a human cytomegalovirus immune evasion protein. Finally, positive selection was found to target nuclear localization signals in IFI16 and the spacer region separating the two HIN domains. Population genetic analysis in humans revealed that an IFI16 genic region has been a target of long-standing balancing selection, possibly acting on two nonsynonymous polymorphisms located in the spacer region. Data herein indicate that ALRs have been repeatedly targeted by natural selection. The balancing selection region in IFI16 carries a variant with opposite risk effect for distinct autoimmune diseases, suggesting antagonistic pleiotropy. We propose that the underlying scenario is the result of an ancestral and still ongoing host–pathogen arms race and that the maintenance of susceptibility alleles for autoimmune diseases at IFI16 represents an evolutionary trade-off. Oxford University Press 2014-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC4007548/ /pubmed/24682156 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evu066 Text en © The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cagliani, Rachele
Forni, Diego
Biasin, Mara
Comabella, Manuel
Guerini, Franca R.
Riva, Stefania
Pozzoli, Uberto
Agliardi, Cristina
Caputo, Domenico
Malhotra, Sunny
Montalban, Xavier
Bresolin, Nereo
Clerici, Mario
Sironi, Manuela
Ancient and Recent Selective Pressures Shaped Genetic Diversity at AIM2-Like Nucleic Acid Sensors
title Ancient and Recent Selective Pressures Shaped Genetic Diversity at AIM2-Like Nucleic Acid Sensors
title_full Ancient and Recent Selective Pressures Shaped Genetic Diversity at AIM2-Like Nucleic Acid Sensors
title_fullStr Ancient and Recent Selective Pressures Shaped Genetic Diversity at AIM2-Like Nucleic Acid Sensors
title_full_unstemmed Ancient and Recent Selective Pressures Shaped Genetic Diversity at AIM2-Like Nucleic Acid Sensors
title_short Ancient and Recent Selective Pressures Shaped Genetic Diversity at AIM2-Like Nucleic Acid Sensors
title_sort ancient and recent selective pressures shaped genetic diversity at aim2-like nucleic acid sensors
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4007548/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24682156
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evu066
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