期刊论文详细信息
PLoS Pathogens
Evolutionary Analyses Suggest a Function of MxB Immunity Proteins Beyond Lentivirus Restriction
Harmit S. Malik1  Janet M. Young1  Michael Emerman1  Patrick S. Mitchell2 
[1] Division of Basic Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, United States of America;Molecular and Cellular Biology Graduate Program, University of Washington, Seattle, United States of America
关键词: Primates;    Sequence alignment;    Evolutionary genetics;    Rodents;    Mammals;    Gene conversion;    Mammalian genomics;    Viral evolution;   
DOI  :  10.1371/journal.ppat.1005304
学科分类:生物科学(综合)
来源: Public Library of Science
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【 摘 要 】

Viruses impose diverse and dynamic challenges on host defenses. Diversifying selection of codons and gene copy number variation are two hallmarks of genetic innovation in antiviral genes engaged in host-virus genetic conflicts. The myxovirus resistance (Mx) genes encode interferon-inducible GTPases that constitute a major arm of the cell-autonomous defense against viral infection. Unlike the broad antiviral activity of MxA, primate MxB was recently shown to specifically inhibit lentiviruses including HIV-1. We carried out detailed evolutionary analyses to investigate whether genetic conflict with lentiviruses has shaped MxB evolution in primates. We found strong evidence for diversifying selection in the MxB N-terminal tail, which contains molecular determinants of MxB anti-lentivirus specificity. However, we found no overlap between previously-mapped residues that dictate lentiviral restriction and those that have evolved under diversifying selection. Instead, our findings are consistent with MxB having a long-standing and important role in the interferon response to viral infection against a broader range of pathogens than is currently appreciated. Despite its critical role in host innate immunity, we also uncovered multiple functional losses of MxB during mammalian evolution, either by pseudogenization or by gene conversion from MxA genes. Thus, although the majority of mammalian genomes encode two Mx genes, this apparent stasis masks the dramatic effects that recombination and diversifying selection have played in shaping the evolutionary history of Mx genes. Discrepancies between our study and previous publications highlight the need to account for recombination in analyses of positive selection, as well as the importance of using sequence datasets with appropriate depth of divergence. Our study also illustrates that evolutionary analyses of antiviral gene families are critical towards understanding molecular principles that govern host-virus interactions and species-specific susceptibility to viral infection.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   

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