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Different evolutionary histories of the two classical class I genes BF1 and BF2 illustrate drift and selection within the stable MHC haplotypes of chickens

  • Iain Shaw
  • , Timothy J. Powell
  • , Denise A. Marston
  • , Ken Baker
  • , Andrew Van Hateren
  • , Patricia Riegert
  • , Michael V. Wiles
  • , Sarah Milne
  • , Stephan Beck
  • , Jim Kaufman
  • Institute for Animal Health
  • Trudeau Institute
  • Animal and Plant Health Agency
  • University of Reading
  • University of Southampton, Faculty of Medicine
  • Basel Institute for Immunology
  • Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine
  • Wellcome Trust

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Articlepeer-review

78 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Compared with the MHC of typical mammals, the chicken MHC (BF/BL region) of the B12 haplotype is smaller, simpler, and rearranged, with two classical class I genes of which only one is highly expressed. In this study, we describe the development of long-distance PCR to amplify some or all of each class I gene separately, allowing us to make the following points. First, six other haplotypes have the same genomic organization as B12, with a poorly expressed (minor) BF1 gene between DMB2 and TAP2 and a well-expressed (major) BF2 gene between TAP2 and C4. Second, the expression of the BF1 gene is crippled in three different ways in these haplotypes: enhancer A deletion (B12, B19), enhancer A divergence and transcription start site deletion (B2, B4, B21), and insertion/rearrangement leading to pseudogenes (B14, B15). Third, the three kinds of alterations in the BF1 gene correspond to dendrograms of the BF1 and poorly expressed class II B (BLB1) genes relecting mostly neutral changes, while the dendrograms of the BF2 and well-expressed class II (BLB2) genes each have completely different topologies relecting selection. The common pattern for the poorly expressed genes relects the fact the BF/BL region undergoes little recombination and allows us to propose a pattern of descent for these chicken MHC haplotypes from a common ancestor. Taken together, these data explain how stable MHC haplotypes predominantly express a single class I molecule, which in turn leads to striking associations of the chicken MHC with resistance to infectious pathogens and response to vaccines.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)5744-5752
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Immunology
Volume178
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2007

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