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Balancing selection at the human salivary agglutinin gene (DMBT1) driven by host-microbe interactions

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posted on 2022-07-07, 09:15 authored by A. F. Alharbi, N. Sheng, K. Nicol, N. Stromberg, E. J. Hollox
Discovering loci under balancing selection in humans can identify loci with alleles that affect response to the environment and disease. Genome variation data have identified the 5′ region of the DMBT1 gene as undergoing balancing selection in humans. DMBT1 encodes the pattern-recognition glycoprotein DMBT1, also known as SALSA, gp340, or salivary agglutinin. DMBT1 binds to a variety of pathogens through a tandemly arranged scavenger receptor cysteine-rich (SRCR) domain, with the number of domains polymorphic in humans. We show that the signal of balancing selection is driven by one haplotype usually carrying a shorter SRCR repeat and another usually carrying a longer SRCR repeat. DMBT1 encoded by a shorter SRCR repeat allele does not bind a cariogenic and invasive Streptococcus mutans strain, in contrast to the long SRCR allele that shows binding. Our results suggest that balancing selection at DMBT1 is due to host-microbe interactions of encoded SRCR tandem repeat alleles.

History

Citation

iScience, Volume 25, Issue 5, 20 May 2022, 104189

Author affiliation

Department of Genetics and Genome Biology

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

iScience

Volume

25

Issue

5

Publisher

Cell Press

issn

2589-0042

eissn

2589-0042

Acceptance date

2022-03-30

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-07-07

Spatial coverage

United States

Language

eng

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