Human pseudogenes of the ABO family show a complex evolutionary dynamics and loss of function.

Article Details

Citation

Casals F, Ferrer-Admetlla A, Sikora M, Ramirez-Soriano A, Marques-Bonet T, Despiau S, Roubinet F, Calafell F, Bertranpetit J, Blancher A

Human pseudogenes of the ABO family show a complex evolutionary dynamics and loss of function.

Glycobiology. 2009 Jun;19(6):583-91. doi: 10.1093/glycob/cwp017. Epub 2009 Feb 13.

PubMed ID
19218399 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The GT6 glycosyltransferases gene family, that includes the ABO blood group, shows a complex evolution pattern, with multiple events of gain and loss in different mammal species. In humans the ABO gene is considered the sole functional member although the O allele is null and is fixed in certain populations. Here, we analyze the human GT6 pseudogene sequences (Forssman, IGB3, GGTA1, GT6m5, GT6m6, and GT6m7) from an evolutionary perspective, by the study of (i) their diversity levels in populations through the resequencing analysis of European and African individuals; (ii) the interpopulation differentiation, with genotyping data from a survey of populations covering most of human genetic diversity; and (iii) the interespecific divergence, by the comparison of the human and some other primate species sequences. Since pseudogenes are expected to evolve under neutrality, they should show an evolutionary pattern different to that of functional sequences, with higher levels of diversity as well as a ratio of nonsynonymous to synonymous changes close to 1. We describe some departures from these expectations, including selection for inactivation in IGB3, GGTA1, and the interesting case of FS (Forssman) with a probable shift of its initial function in the primate lineage, which put it apart from a pure neutral pseudogene. These results suggest that some of these GT6 human pseudogenes may still be functional and retain some valuable unknown function in humans, in some case even at the protein level. The evolutionary analysis of all members of the GT6 family in humans allows an insight into their functional history, a process likely due to the interaction of the host glycans that they synthesize with pathogens; the past process that can be unraveled through the footprints left by natural selection in the extant genome variation.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Glycosyltransferase 6 domain-containing protein 1Q7Z4J2Details