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Main Authors: Talarico, Lorenzo, Rakaj, Arnold, Tancioni, Lorenzo
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Biology 2024
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39765727/
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author Talarico, Lorenzo
Rakaj, Arnold
Tancioni, Lorenzo
author_facet Talarico, Lorenzo
Rakaj, Arnold
Tancioni, Lorenzo
Talarico, Lorenzo
Rakaj, Arnold
Tancioni, Lorenzo
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Unveiling MHC- Polymorphism Within the Western Balkan Salmonid Hotspot: Preliminary Outcomes from Native Trouts of Ohrid Lake and the Drin-Skadar Drainage (Albania). Talarico, Lorenzo Rakaj, Arnold Tancioni, Lorenzo Due to their involvement in pathogen-mediated immune responses, the hypervariable genes of the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) have become a paradigm for investigating the evolution and maintenance of genetic (adaptive) diversity, contextually providing insight into the viability of wild populations, which is meaningful for conservation. Here, we provide the first preliminary characterization of MHC polymorphism and evolution in trouts from Albania, a known hotspot of Salmonid diversity harboring ecologically and phylogenetically distinct native (threatened) taxa. Overall, 36 trout-including Lake Ohrid-endemic and , and both riverine and lacustrine native brown trout (the complex) from the Drin-Skadar drainage-were genotyped at the MHC- locus through next-generation amplicon sequencing. We identified 34 alleles (including 30 novel alleles), unveiling remarkable population/taxon MHC- distinctiveness. Despite apparent functional (supertype) similarity, and the complex showed MHC-typical high sequence/allele diversity and evidence of global/codon-specific positive selection, particularly at antigen-binding sites. Conversely, deep-water-adapted revealed unexpectedly reduced allelic/supertype diversity and relaxed selection. Evolution by reticulation and signals of trans-species polymorphism emerged from sequence genealogies. Further investigations and increased sampling will provide a deeper understanding of the evolutionary mechanisms yielding the observed pattern of MHC diversity across Albanian trout taxa and populations.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_39765727
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2024
publisher Biology
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Unveiling MHC- Polymorphism Within the Western Balkan Salmonid Hotspot: Preliminary Outcomes from Native Trouts of Ohrid Lake and the Drin-Skadar Drainage (Albania).
Talarico, Lorenzo
Rakaj, Arnold
Tancioni, Lorenzo
Unveiling MHC- Polymorphism Within the Western Balkan Salmonid Hotspot: Preliminary Outcomes from Native Trouts of Ohrid Lake and the Drin-Skadar Drainage (Albania). Talarico, Lorenzo Rakaj, Arnold Tancioni, Lorenzo Due to their involvement in pathogen-mediated immune responses, the hypervariable genes of the Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) have become a paradigm for investigating the evolution and maintenance of genetic (adaptive) diversity, contextually providing insight into the viability of wild populations, which is meaningful for conservation. Here, we provide the first preliminary characterization of MHC polymorphism and evolution in trouts from Albania, a known hotspot of Salmonid diversity harboring ecologically and phylogenetically distinct native (threatened) taxa. Overall, 36 trout-including Lake Ohrid-endemic and , and both riverine and lacustrine native brown trout (the complex) from the Drin-Skadar drainage-were genotyped at the MHC- locus through next-generation amplicon sequencing. We identified 34 alleles (including 30 novel alleles), unveiling remarkable population/taxon MHC- distinctiveness. Despite apparent functional (supertype) similarity, and the complex showed MHC-typical high sequence/allele diversity and evidence of global/codon-specific positive selection, particularly at antigen-binding sites. Conversely, deep-water-adapted revealed unexpectedly reduced allelic/supertype diversity and relaxed selection. Evolution by reticulation and signals of trans-species polymorphism emerged from sequence genealogies. Further investigations and increased sampling will provide a deeper understanding of the evolutionary mechanisms yielding the observed pattern of MHC diversity across Albanian trout taxa and populations.
title Unveiling MHC- Polymorphism Within the Western Balkan Salmonid Hotspot: Preliminary Outcomes from Native Trouts of Ohrid Lake and the Drin-Skadar Drainage (Albania).
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39765727/