|
|
|
|
Vol. 10, Issue 5, 634-643, May 2000 Alu Elements Support Independent Origin of Prosimian, Platyrrhine, and Catarrhine Mhc-DRB Genes
Max-Planck-Institut für Biologie, Abteilung Immungenetik,
D-72076 Tübingen, Germany
The primate major histocompatibility complex (Mhc) genes
fall into two classes and each of the classes into several families. Of
the class II families, the DRB family has a long and complex evolutionary history marked by gene turnover, rearrangement, and molecular convergence. Because the history is not easily decipherable from sequences alone, Alu element insertions were used as
cladistic markers to support the surmised phylogenetic relationships
among the DRB genes. Intron 1 segments of 24 DRB
genes from five platyrrhine species and five DRB genes from
three prosimian species were amplified by PCR and cloned, and the
amplification products were sequenced or PCR-typed for Alu
repeats. Three Alu elements were identified in the platyrrhine
and four in the prosimian DRB genes. One of the platyrrhine
elements (Alu50J) is also found in the Catarrhini, whereas the
other two (Alu62Sc, Alu63Sc) are restricted to the New World monkeys. Similarly, the four prosimian elements are found
only in this taxon. This distribution of Alu elements is consistent with the phylogeny of the DRB genes as determined
from their intron 1 sequences in an earlier and the present study. It
contradicts the exon 2-based phylogeny and thus corroborates the
conclusion that the evolution of DRB exon 2 sequences is, to
some extent, shaped by molecular convergence. Taken together, the data
indicate that each of the assemblages of DRB genes in prosimians, platyrrhines, and catarrhines is derived from a separate ancestral gene.
[The sequence data described in this paper
have been submitted to the GenBank data library under accession nos.
AF197226-AF197240.]
1 Corresponding author. 10:634-643 ©2000 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/00 $5.00 |