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Polymorphism and evolution of HLA-B gene in the Americas

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Author(s):
Rodrigo dos Santos Francisco
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Master's Dissertation
Press: São Paulo.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Instituto de Biociências (IBIOC/SB)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Diogo Meyer; Anna Carla Renata Krepel Goldberg; Gabriel Henrique Marroig Zambonato
Advisor: Diogo Meyer
Abstract

The protein encoded by the HLA-B gene presentes antigenic peptides for immune recognition by T cells and interacts with killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors. There is strong evidence that HLA-B is evolving under natural selection. South American Amerindians Populations have a great number of exclusive (endemic) HLA-B alleles in high frequency. These are alleles found in this geographic region, and nowhere else in the world. Differently, Native North American Populations have the same alleles as those found in Asians. The allelic turnover hypothesis was proposed to explain these findings. According to this model, the endemic South American alleles reached high frequencies and replaced the old ones under pathogen driving selection and/or strong genetic drift. It is likely that the allelic turnover occurs several times in the history of South Americans Populations, explaining the differences in endemic alleles present in each populations. It is plausible that Native Americans Populations with evidence of allelic turnover were under a strong selective pressure. To test this hypothesis we analyzed the HLA-B gene in 474 individuals from 26 Native American and one Siberian Populations. We described the endemic alleles frequencies for each population and applied the Ewens-Watterson and Tajimas D tests of neutrality. We found a positive correlation between distances from the Behring Strait and on increase in the frequency of the endemic alleles (r2 = 0.351, p<0.01). However, significance was lost when the North Americans Populations werw removed (r2 = 0.109, p>0.10), showing that the correlation was driven by differences between the Neartic Populations (low frequency of endemic alleles) and Neotropical Populations (high frequency of endemic alleles). This observation is in agreement with the hypothesis of correlation between the tropical environment and the shift in the allelic composition observed in Native Latin American Populations. Our results of Tajimas D showed deviations compatible with the action of balancing selection in populations in all the Americas. It is likely that this signal was generated before the colonization of the continent, probably with no correlation with the increase of the endemic alleles frequencies. We observed similarities in the endemic allelic composition of populations located at specific regions (eg, Amazonia or South Mexico) which is likely an effect of their common ancestry Only two populations deviated significantly from neutrality when we applied the Ewens-Watterson test (a less powerful test for ancient selective or demographic effects than Tajimas D). These results are compatible with selection favoring the endemic alleles in the past, before the establishment of the individual populations, whose demographic histories resulted in patterns of variation compatible with neutrality. (AU)