Recent surveys of the human genome have highlighted the significance of balancing selection in relation to understanding the evolutionary origins of disease-associated variation. Cis-regulatory variation at the blood group-related glycosyltransferase B4galnt2 is associated with a phenotype in mice that closely resembles a common human bleeding disorder, von Willebrand disease. In this study, we have performed a survey of the 5′ flanking region of the B4galnt2 gene in several Mus musculus subspecies and Mus spretus. Our results reveal a clear pattern of trans-species polymorphism and indicate that allele classes conferring alternative tissue-specific expression patterns have been maintained for >2.8 My in the genus Mus. Furthermore, analysis of B4galnt2 expression patterns revealed the presence of an additional functional class of alleles, supporting a role for gastrointestinal phenotypes in the long-term maintenance of expression variation at this gene. The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Linnenbrink, M., Johnsen, J. M., Montero, I., Brzezinski, C. R., Harr, B., & Baines, J. F. (2011). Long-term balancing selection at the blood group-related gene B4galnt2 in the genus Mus (Rodentia; Muridae). Molecular Biology and Evolution, 28(11), 2999–3003. https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msr150
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