Sequence diversity at the proximal 14q32.1 SERPIN subcluster: Evidence for natural selection favoring the pseudogenization of SERPINA2

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Abstract

The superfamily of serine protease inhibitors (SERPINs) plays a key role in controlling the activity of proteinases in diverse biological processes. α1-antitrypsin (SERPINA1), the most studied member of this family, is encoded by a gene located within the proximal 14q32.1 SERPIN subcluster, together with the highly homologous α1-antitrypsin-like sequence (SERPINA2), which was previously proposed to be a pseudogene. Here, we performed a resequencing study encompassing both SERPINA1 and SERPINA2 as well as the adjacent gene coding for corticosteroid-binding globulin (SERPINA6) in samples from Europe and West Africa. In the African sample, we found that a common haplotype carrying a 2-kb deletion in the SERPINA2 gene is associated with remarkable long-range homozygozity as if it was quickly driven to high frequency by natural selection acting on an advantageous variant. An analysis of the HapMap Phase I data for the Yoruba sample confirmed that variation in this subcluster carries a strong signal of positive selection. We also show that the SERPINA2 gene is expressed and probably encodes a functional SERPIN. Finally, comparisons with orthologous sequences in nonhuman primates showed that SERPINA2 is present in some great apes, but in chimpanzees it was lost by a deletion event independent from that observed in humans. In agreement with the "less is more" hypothesis, we propose that loss of SERPINA2 is an ongoing process associated with a selective advantage during recent primate evolution, possibly because of a role in fertility or in host-pathogen interactions. © The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. All rights reserved.

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Seixas, S., Suriano, G., Carvalho, F., Seruca, R., Rocha, J., & Di Rienzo, A. (2007). Sequence diversity at the proximal 14q32.1 SERPIN subcluster: Evidence for natural selection favoring the pseudogenization of SERPINA2. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 24(2), 587–598. https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msl187

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