Bernatchez L, Landry C
Department de biologie, Université Laval, Ste Foy, Québec, Canada.
J Evol Biol. 2003 May;16(3):363-77. doi: 10.1046/j.1420-9101.2003.00531.x.
Elucidating how natural selection promotes local adaptation in interaction with migration, genetic drift and mutation is a central aim of evolutionary biology. While several conceptual and practical limitations are still restraining our ability to study these processes at the DNA level, genes of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) offer several assets that make them unique candidates for this purpose. Yet, it is unclear what general conclusions can be drawn after 15 years of empirical research that documented MHC diversity in the wild. The general objective of this review is to complement earlier literature syntheses on this topic by focusing on MHC studies other than humans and mice. This review first revealed a strong taxonomic bias, whereby many more studies of MHC diversity in natural populations have dealt with mammals than all other vertebrate classes combined. Secondly, it confirmed that positive selection has a determinant role in shaping patterns of nucleotide diversity in MHC genes in all vertebrates studied. Yet, future tests of positive selection would greatly benefit from making better use of the increasing number of models potentially offering more statistical rigour and higher resolution in detecting the effect and form of selection. Thirdly, studies that compared patterns of MHC diversity within and among natural populations with neutral expectations have reported higher population differentiation at MHC than expected either under neutrality or simple models of balancing selection. Fourthly, several studies showed that MHC-dependent mate preference and kin recognition may provide selective factors maintaining polymorphism in wild outbred populations. However, they also showed that such reproductive mechanisms are complex and context-based. Fifthly, several studies provided evidence that MHC may significantly influence fitness, either by affecting reproductive success or progeny survival to pathogens infections. Overall, the evidence is compelling that the MHC currently represents the best system available in vertebrates to investigate how natural selection can promote local adaptation at the gene level despite the counteracting actions of migration and genetic drift. We conclude this review by proposing several directions where future research is needed.
阐明自然选择如何在与迁移、遗传漂变和突变的相互作用中促进局部适应,是进化生物学的核心目标。尽管一些概念和实际限制仍在制约我们在DNA水平上研究这些过程的能力,但主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)的基因具有多项特性,使其成为实现这一目标的独特候选对象。然而,经过15年对野生MHC多样性的实证研究,目前尚不清楚能够得出哪些一般性结论。本综述的总体目标是,聚焦于除人类和小鼠之外的MHC研究,以补充该主题早期的文献综述。本综述首先揭示了一种强烈的分类学偏差,即对自然种群中MHC多样性的研究,涉及哺乳动物的比所有其他脊椎动物类群的总和还要多。其次,它证实了正选择在所有已研究的脊椎动物的MHC基因中核苷酸多样性模式的形成中起决定性作用。然而,未来关于正选择的测试将极大地受益于更好地利用越来越多的模型,这些模型在检测选择的效应和形式方面可能提供更高的统计严谨性和分辨率。第三,将自然种群内部和之间的MHC多样性模式与中性预期进行比较的研究报告称,MHC处的种群分化高于中性或简单平衡选择模型下的预期。第四,多项研究表明,依赖MHC的配偶偏好和亲属识别可能提供维持野生远交种群多态性的选择因素。然而,这些研究也表明,这种生殖机制是复杂的且基于特定情境。第五,多项研究提供证据表明,MHC可能通过影响繁殖成功率或病原体感染后的后代存活率,对适应性产生显著影响。总体而言,有令人信服的证据表明,尽管存在迁移和遗传漂变的抵消作用,但MHC目前仍是脊椎动物中可用于研究自然选择如何在基因水平上促进局部适应的最佳系统。我们通过提出未来研究需要关注的几个方向来结束本综述。