MHC Class II Supertypes Affect Survival and Lifetime Reproductive Success in a Migratory Songbird
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Abstract
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) plays a critical role in the immune response against pathogens. Its high polymorphism
is thought to be mainly the consequence of host-pathogen
co-evolution,
but elucidating the mechanism(s) driving MHC
evolution remains challenging for natural populations. We investigated the diversity of MHC class II genes in a wild population
of pied flycatchers Ficedula hypoleuca and tested its associations with two key components of individual fitness: lifetime reproductive
success and survival. Among 180 breeding adults in our study population, we found 182 unique MHC class II exon
2 alleles. The alleles showed a strong signal of positive selection and grouped into nine functional supertypes based on physicochemical
properties at the inferred antigen-binding
sites. Three supertypes were found in > 98% of the sampled individuals,
indicating that they are nearly fixed in the population. We found no rare supertypes in the population, as all supertypes were
present in > 70% of individuals. Three supertypes were related to different components of individual fitness: two were associated
with lower offspring production over time, while the third was positively associated with survival. Overall, the substantial allelic
and functional diversity and the relationship between specific supertypes and fitness are in accordance with the notion that balancing
selection maintains MHC class II diversity in the study population, possibly with fluctuating selection as the underlying
mechanism. The absence of rare supertypes in the population suggests that the balancing selection is not driven by rare-allele
advantage.
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Bibliographic citation
Canal, D., Roved, J., Lara, A., Camacho, C., Potti, J., & Santoro, S. (2024). MHC Class II Supertypes Affect Survival and Lifetime Reproductive Success in a Migratory Songbird. In Molecular Ecology (Vol. 33, Issue 22). Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.17554







