Adaptive Changes in Hemoglobin Function in High-Altitude Tibetan Canids Were Derived via Gene Conversion and Introgression

被引:24
作者
Signore, Anthony, V [1 ]
Yang, Ying-Zhong [2 ]
Yang, Quan-Yu [2 ]
Qin, Ga [2 ]
Moriyama, Hideaki [1 ]
Ge, Ri-Li [2 ]
Storz, Jay F. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nebraska, Sch Biol Sci, Lincoln, NE 68588 USA
[2] Qinghai Univ, Res Ctr High Altitude Med, Xining, Qinghai, Peoples R China
基金
美国国家卫生研究院; 美国国家科学基金会; 中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
introgression; hemoglobin; hypoxia; high-altitude; Tibetan mastiff; Tibetan wolf; GLOBIN GENE; PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS; ADAPTATION; ORIGIN; OXYGENATION; MUTATIONS; EVOLUTION; HYPOXIA; FAMILY; HEAT;
D O I
10.1093/molbev/msz097
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
A key question in evolutionary biology concerns the relative importance of different sources of adaptive genetic variation, such as de novo mutations, standing variation, and introgressive hybridization. A corollary question concerns how allelic variants derived from these different sources may influence the molecular basis of phenotypic adaptation. Here, we use a protein-engineering approach to examine the phenotypic effect of putatively adaptive hemoglobin (Hb) mutations in the high-altitude Tibetan wolf that were selectively introgressed into the Tibetan mastiff, a high-altitude dog breed that is renowned for its hypoxia tolerance. Experiments revealed that the introgressed coding variants confer an increased Hb-O-2 affinity in conjunction with an enhanced Bohr effect. We also document that affinity-enhancing mutations in the beta-globin gene of Tibetan wolf were originally derived via interparalog gene conversion from a tandemly linked beta-globin pseudogene. Thus, affinity-enhancing mutations were introduced into the beta-globin gene of Tibetan wolf via one form of intragenomic lateral transfer (ectopic gene conversion) and were subsequently introduced into the Tibetan mastiff genome via a second form of lateral transfer (introgression). Site-directed mutagenesis experiments revealed that the increased Hb-O-2 affinity requires a specific two-site combination of amino acid replacements, suggesting that the molecular underpinnings of Hb adaptation in Tibetan mastiff (involving mutations that arose in a nonexpressed gene and which originally fixed in Tibetan wolf) may be qualitatively distinct from functionally similar changes in protein function that could have evolved via sequential fixation of de novo mutations during the breed's relatively short duration of residency at high altitude.
引用
收藏
页码:2227 / 2237
页数:11
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