Detecting Site-Specific Physicochemical Selective Pressures: Applications to the Class I HLA of the Human Major Histocompatibility Complex and the SRK of the Plant Sporophytic Self-Incompatibility System
- 1 March 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Molecular Evolution
- Vol. 60 (3) , 315-326
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00239-004-0153-1
Abstract
Models of codon substitution are developed that incorporate physicochemical properties of amino acids. When amino acid sites are inferred to be under positive selection, these models suggest the nature and extent of the physicochemical properties under selection. This is accomplished by first partitioning the codons on the basis of some property of the encoded amino acids. This partition is used to parametrize the rates of property-conserving and property-altering base substitutions at the codon level by means of finite mixtures of Markov models that also account for codon and transition:transversion biases. Here, we apply this method to two positively selected receptors involved in ligand-recognition: the class I alleles of the human major histocompatibility complex (MHC) of known structure and the S-locus receptor kinase (SRK) of the sporophytic self-incompatibility system (SSI) in cruciferous plants (Brassicaceae), whose structure is unknown. Through likelihood ratio tests we demonstrate that at some sites, the positively selected MHC and SRK proteins are under physicochemical selective pressures to alter polarity, volume, polarity and/or volume, and charge to various extents. An empirical Bayes approach is used to identify sites that may be important for ligand recognition in these proteins.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- HLA-B27 Subtypes Differentially Associated with Disease Exhibit Subtle Structural AlterationsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2002
- Determining the Physical Limits of the Brassica S Locus by Recombinational AnalysisPlant Cell, 2000
- Allele-specific motifs revealed by sequencing of self-peptides eluted from MHC moleculesNature, 1991
- Antigenicity of HLA-A2 and HLA-B7: Loss and gain of serologic determinants induced by site-specific mutagenesis at residues 62 to 80Human Immunology, 1991
- Pattern of nucleotide substitution at major histocompatibility complex class I loci reveals overdominant selectionNature, 1988
- Evolutionary trees from DNA sequences: A maximum likelihood approachJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1981
- Two types of amino acid substitutions in protein evolutionJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1979
- Amino Acid Difference Formula to Help Explain Protein EvolutionScience, 1974
- Selective Constraints on Amino-acid Substitutions during the Evolution of ProteinsNature, 1970
- Relations between chemical structure and biological activity in peptidesJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1966