Wheat Christopher W, Watt Ward B, Pollock David D, Schulte Patricia M
Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, USA.
Mol Biol Evol. 2006 Mar;23(3):499-512. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msj062. Epub 2005 Nov 16.
Colias eurytheme butterflies display extensive allozyme polymorphism in the enzyme phosphoglucose isomerase (PGI). Earlier studies on biochemical and fitness effects of these genotypes found evidence of strong natural selection maintaining this polymorphism in the wild. Here we analyze the molecular features of this polymorphism by sequencing multiple alleles and modeling their structures. PGI is a dimer with rotational symmetry. Each monomer provides a critical residue to the other monomer's catalytic center. Sequenced alleles differ at multiple amino acid positions, including cryptic charge-neutral variation, but most consistent differences among the electromorph alleles are at the charge-changing amino acid sites. Principal candidate sites of selection, identified by structural and functional analyses and by their variants' population frequencies, occur in interpenetrating loops across the interface between monomers, where they may alter subunit interactions and catalytic center geometry. Comparison to a second (and basal) species, Colias meadii, also polymorphic for PGI under natural selection, reveals one fixed amino acid difference between their PGIs, which is located in the interpenetrating loop and accompanies functional differences among their variants. We also study nucleotide variability among the PGI alleles, comparing these data to similar data from another glycolytic enzyme gene, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Despite extensive nonsynonymous and synonymous polymorphism at PGI in each species, the only base changes fixed between species are the two causing the amino acid replacement; this absence of synonymous fixation yields a significant McDonald-Kreitman test. Analyses of these data suggest historical population expansion. Positive peaks of Tajima's D statistic, representing regions of neutral "hitchhiking," are found around the principal candidate sites of selection. This study provides novel views of molecular-structural mechanisms, and beginnings of historical evidence, for a long-persistent balanced enzyme polymorphism at PGI in these and perhaps other species.
宽纹黄粉蝶(Colias eurytheme)在磷酸葡萄糖异构酶(PGI)上表现出广泛的等位酶多态性。早期对这些基因型的生化和适应性影响的研究发现,有证据表明在野外存在强大的自然选择维持这种多态性。在这里,我们通过对多个等位基因进行测序并对其结构进行建模来分析这种多态性的分子特征。PGI是一种具有旋转对称性的二聚体。每个单体为另一个单体的催化中心提供一个关键残基。测序的等位基因在多个氨基酸位置存在差异,包括隐蔽的电荷中性变异,但在电泳等位基因之间最一致的差异发生在电荷改变的氨基酸位点。通过结构和功能分析以及其变体的群体频率确定的主要选择候选位点,出现在单体之间界面的互穿环中,在那里它们可能改变亚基相互作用和催化中心几何形状。与第二个(也是基础的)物种——同样在自然选择下PGI具有多态性的米氏黄粉蝶(Colias meadii)进行比较,发现它们的PGI之间有一个固定的氨基酸差异,该差异位于互穿环中,并伴随着它们变体之间的功能差异。我们还研究了PGI等位基因之间的核苷酸变异性,并将这些数据与另一种糖酵解酶基因——甘油醛-3-磷酸脱氢酶的类似数据进行比较。尽管每个物种的PGI都存在广泛的非同义多态性和同义多态性,但物种之间固定的唯一碱基变化是导致氨基酸替换的两个变化;这种同义固定的缺失产生了显著的麦克唐纳-克里特曼检验。对这些数据的分析表明存在历史种群扩张。在主要选择候选位点周围发现了代表中性“搭便车”区域的塔吉玛D统计量的正峰。这项研究为这些以及可能其他物种中PGI长期存在的平衡酶多态性提供了分子结构机制的新观点和历史证据的开端。