Authors
Reto Burri, Nicolas Salamin, Romain A Studer, Alexandre Roulin, Luca Fumagalli
Publication date
2010/10/1
Journal
Molecular biology and evolution
Volume
27
Issue
10
Pages
2360-2374
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Gene duplication and neofunctionalization are known to be important processes in the evolution of phenotypic complexity. They account for important evolutionary novelties that confer ecological adaptation, such as the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), a multigene family crucial to the vertebrate immune system. In birds, two MHC class II β (MHCIIβ) exon 3 lineages have been recently characterized, and two hypotheses for the evolutionary history of MHCIIβ lineages were proposed. These lineages could have arisen either by 1) an ancient duplication and subsequent divergence of one paralog or by 2) recent parallel duplications followed by functional convergence. Here, we compiled a data set consisting of 63 MHCIIβ exon 3 sequences from six avian orders to distinguish between these hypotheses and to understand the role of selection in the divergent evolution of the two avian MHCIIβ lineages …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Burri, N Salamin, RA Studer, A Roulin, L Fumagalli - Molecular biology and evolution, 2010