The complement system is an innate immunity effector mechanism; its action is antagonized by a wide array of pathogens and complement evasion determines the virulence of several infections. We investigated the evolutionary history of the complement system and of bacterial-encoded complement-interacting proteins. Complement components targeted by several pathogens evolved under strong selective pressure in primates, with selection acting on residues at the contact interface with microbial/viral proteins. Positively selected sites in CFH and C4BPA account for the human specificity of gonococcal infection. Bacterial interactors, evolved adaptively as well, with selected sites located at interaction surfaces with primate complement proteins. These results epitomize the expectation under a genetic conflict scenario whereby the host's and the pathogen's genes evolve within binding avoidance-binding seeking dynamics. In silico mutagenesis and protein-protein docking analyses supported this by showing that positively selected sites, both in the host's and in the pathogen's interacting partner, modulate binding.

The mammalian complement system as an epitome of host-pathogen genetic conflicts / R. Cagliani, D. Forni, G. Filippi, A. Mozzi, L. De Gioia, C. Pontremoli, U. Pozzoli, N. Bresolin, M. Clerici, M. Sironi. - In: MOLECULAR ECOLOGY. - ISSN 0962-1083. - 25:6(2016 Mar), pp. 1324-1339. [10.1111/mec.13558]

The mammalian complement system as an epitome of host-pathogen genetic conflicts

R. Cagliani;D. Forni;C. Pontremoli;N. Bresolin;M. Clerici;
2016

Abstract

The complement system is an innate immunity effector mechanism; its action is antagonized by a wide array of pathogens and complement evasion determines the virulence of several infections. We investigated the evolutionary history of the complement system and of bacterial-encoded complement-interacting proteins. Complement components targeted by several pathogens evolved under strong selective pressure in primates, with selection acting on residues at the contact interface with microbial/viral proteins. Positively selected sites in CFH and C4BPA account for the human specificity of gonococcal infection. Bacterial interactors, evolved adaptively as well, with selected sites located at interaction surfaces with primate complement proteins. These results epitomize the expectation under a genetic conflict scenario whereby the host's and the pathogen's genes evolve within binding avoidance-binding seeking dynamics. In silico mutagenesis and protein-protein docking analyses supported this by showing that positively selected sites, both in the host's and in the pathogen's interacting partner, modulate binding.
complement system; host-pathogen genetic conflict; human-specific infections; positive selection; animals; bacteria; complement activation; complement C4b-binding protein; complement factor H; complement system proteins; genetics, population; host-pathogen interactions; humans; immunity, innate; molecular docking simulation; phylogeny; primates; protein interaction mapping; selection, genetic; sequence analysis, DNA; biological evolution; ecology, evolution, behavior and systematics; genetics
Settore MED/26 - Neurologia
Settore MED/04 - Patologia Generale
mar-2016
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/420764
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