Infectious diseases, imposing density-dependent mortality on MHC/HLA variation, can account for balancing selection and MHC/HLA polymorphism
D. P. L. Green

TL;DR
This paper presents a model where infectious diseases impose density-dependent regulation on HLA haplotypes, explaining the extensive polymorphism and balancing selection observed in the human MHC system.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel model linking pathogen-driven density regulation to HLA haplotype diversity and balancing selection, supported by empirical HLA data.
Findings
High-frequency haplotypes show positive selection.
HLA alleles exhibit positive epistasis and pleiotropy.
HLA haplotypes form a network with quasi-species properties.
Abstract
The human MHC transplantation loci (HLA-A, -B, -C, -DPB1, -DQB1, -DRB1) are the most polymorphic in the human genome. It is generally accepted this polymorphism reflects a role in presenting pathogen-derived peptide to the adaptive immune system. Proposed mechanisms for the polymorphism such as negative frequency-dependent selection (NFDS) and heterozygote advantage (HA) focus on HLA alleles, not haplotypes. Here, we propose a model for the polymorphism in which infectious diseases impose independent density-dependent regulation on HLA haplotypes. More specifically, a complex pathogen environment drives extensive host polymorphism through a guild of HLA haplotypes that are specialised and show incomplete peptide recognition. Separation of haplotype guilds is maintained by limiting similarity. The outcome is a wide and stable range of haplotype densities at steady-state in which…
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Taxonomy
TopicsT-cell and B-cell Immunology
MethodsSparse Evolutionary Training · Focus
