Human Gene Age Dating Reveals an Early and Rapid Evolutionary Construction of the Adaptive Immune System

Author:

Zhang Li1234ORCID,Park Jonathan J1234,Dong Matthew B123456,Arsala Deanna7ORCID,Xia Shengqian7ORCID,Chen Jianhai7,Sosa Dylan7ORCID,Atlas Jared E78,Long Manyuan7ORCID,Chen Sidi12345910

Affiliation:

1. System Biology Institute, Integrated Science & Technology Center , West Haven, Connecticut , USA

2. Department of Genetics, Yale University School of Medicine , New Haven, Connecticut , USA

3. Center for Cancer Systems Biology, Integrated Science & Technology Center , West Haven, Connecticut , USA

4. Yale M.D.-Ph.D. Program , New Haven, Connecticut , USA

5. Immunobiology Program, The Anlyan Center , New Haven, Connecticut , USA

6. Department of Immunobiology, The Anlyan Center , New Haven, Connecticut , USA

7. Department of Ecology and Evolution, The University of Chicago , Chicago, Illinois , USA

8. Committee on Genetics, Genomics and Systems Biology, The University of Chicago , Chicago, Illinois , USA

9. Yale Comprehensive Cancer Center , New Haven, Connecticut , USA

10. Yale Stem Cell Center, Yale University School of Medicine , New Haven, Connecticut , USA

Abstract

Abstract T cells are a type of white blood cell that play a critical role in the immune response against foreign pathogens through a process called T cell adaptive immunity (TCAI). However, the evolution of the genes and nucleotide sequences involved in TCAI is not well understood. To investigate this, we performed comparative studies of gene annotations and genome assemblies of 28 vertebrate species and identified sets of human genes that are involved in TCAI, carcinogenesis, and aging. We found that these gene sets share interaction pathways, which may have contributed to the evolution of longevity in the vertebrate lineage leading to humans. Our human gene age dating analyses revealed that there was rapid origination of genes with TCAI-related functions prior to the Cretaceous eutherian radiation and these new genes mainly encode negative regulators. We identified no new TCAI-related genes after the divergence of placental mammals, but we did detect an extensive number of amino acid substitutions under strong positive selection in recently evolved human immunity genes suggesting they are coevolving with adaptive immunity. More specifically, we observed that antigen processing and presentation and checkpoint genes are significantly enriched among new genes evolving under positive selection. These observations reveal evolutionary processes of TCAI that were associated with rapid gene duplication in the early stages of vertebrates and subsequent sequence changes in TCAI-related genes. The analysis of vertebrate genomes provides evidence that a "big bang" of adaptive immune genes occurred 300-500 million years ago. These processes together suggest an early genetic construction of the vertebrate immune system and subsequent molecular adaptation to diverse antigens.

Funder

Yale Discretionary

NIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference58 articles.

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