Data from: Nonparallelism in MHC IIβ diversity accompanies nonparallelism in pathogen infection of lake whitefish (Coregonus clupeaformis) species pairs as revealed by next generation sequencing
Major histocompatibility (MHC) immune system genes may evolve in response to pathogens in the environment. Because they also may affect mate choice, they are candidates for having great importance in ecological speciation. Here, we use next-generation sequencing to test the general hypothesis of par...
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Zusammenfassung: | Major histocompatibility (MHC) immune system genes may evolve in response
to pathogens in the environment. Because they also may affect mate choice,
they are candidates for having great importance in ecological speciation.
Here, we use next-generation sequencing to test the general hypothesis of
parallelism in patterns of MHCIIβ diversity and bacterial infections among
five dwarf and normal whitefish sympatric pairs. A second objective was to
assess the functional relationships between specific MHCIIβ alleles and
pathogens in natural conditions. Each individual had between one and four
alleles, indicating two paralogous loci. In Cliff Lake, the dwarf ecotype
was monomorphic for the most common allele. In Webster Lake, the skew in
the allelic distribution was towards the same allele but in the normal
ecotype, underscoring the nonparallel divergence among lakes. Our signal
of balancing selection matched putative peptide binding region residues in
some cases, but not in others, supporting other recent findings of
substantial functional differences in fish MHCIIβ compared with mammals.
Individuals with fewer alleles were less likely to be infected; thus, we
found no evidence for the heterozygote advantage hypothesis. MHCIIβ
alleles and pathogenic bacteria formed distinct clusters in multivariate
analyses, and clusters of certain alleles were associated with clusters of
pathogens, or sometimes the absence of pathogens, indicating functional
relationships at the individual level. Given that patterns of MHCIIβ and
bacteria were nonparallel among dwarf and normal whitefish pairs, we
conclude that pathogens driving MHCIIβ evolution did not play a direct
role in their parallel phenotypic evolution. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.ft94b |