Rapid Evolution of Glycan Recognition Receptors Reveals an Axis of Host–Microbe Arms Races beyond Canonical Protein–Protein Interfaces

Author:

Hilbert Zoë A12ORCID,Haffener Paige E1,Young Hannah J12,Schwiesow Mara J W12,Leffler Ellen M1ORCID,Elde Nels C12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Human Genetics, University of Utah , Salt Lake City, Utah , USA

2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Utah School of Medicine , Salt Lake City, UT , USA

Abstract

Abstract Detection of microbial pathogens is a primary function of many mammalian immune proteins. This is accomplished through the recognition of diverse microbial-produced macromolecules including proteins, nucleic acids, and carbohydrates. Pathogens subvert host defenses by rapidly changing these structures to avoid detection, placing strong selective pressures on host immune proteins that repeatedly adapt to remain effective. Signatures of rapid evolution have been identified in numerous immunity proteins involved in the detection of pathogenic protein substrates, but whether similar signals can be observed in host proteins engaged in interactions with other types of pathogen-derived molecules has received less attention. This focus on protein–protein interfaces has largely obscured the study of fungi as contributors to host–pathogen conflicts, despite their importance as a formidable class of vertebrate pathogens. Here, we provide evidence that mammalian immune receptors involved in the detection of microbial glycans have been subject to recurrent positive selection. We find that rapidly evolving sites in these genes cluster in key functional domains involved in carbohydrate recognition. Further, we identify convergent patterns of substitution and evidence for balancing selection in one particular gene, MelLec, which plays a critical role in controlling invasive fungal disease. Our results also highlight the power of evolutionary analyses to reveal uncharacterized interfaces of host–pathogen conflict by identifying genes, like CLEC12A, with strong signals of positive selection across mammalian lineages. These results suggest that the realm of interfaces shaped by host–microbe conflicts extends beyond the world of host–viral protein–protein interactions and into the world of microbial glycans and fungi.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Investigator in the Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease

Helen Hay Whitney Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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