Gene conversions are frequent but not under positive selection in the Siglec gene families of primates
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Abstract
Siglecs are cell surface proteins that belong to the immunoglobulin superfamily and which bind sialic acids. They are
composed of two groups, the conserved Siglecs and the CD33-related Siglecs. Previous studies have reported the occurrence of
gene conversions between human CD33-related Siglecs and suggested that these conversions are adaptive because they increase
the diversity of these immunoglobulin-related genes. Here, we analyze the Siglec genes of five primate species and show that
gene conversions are not observed between conserved Siglec genes but that they are frequent between primate CD33-related
Siglecs. The gene conversions between CD33-related Siglec genes only occur between similar genes and equally frequently in
sialic acid binding and nonbinding domains. Furthermore, dN/dS ratio tests show that most of the Ig-like V-type 1 and the Ig-like
C2-type 1 domains of Siglec genes evolve either neutrally or under purifying selection and that gene conversions were not
responsible for the positively selected regions detected in the Ig-like V-type1 domain of the human SIGLEC7 and SIGLEC9 genes.
Our results suggest that the frequent gene conversions between CD33-related
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Keywords
gene conversion, Siglec genes, positive selection, selective constraints, purifying selection
Citation
Genome 57: 317–325 (2014)
