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The evolution of bat nucleic acid‐sensing Toll‐like receptors
Authors:Marina Escalera‐Zamudio  M Lisandra Zepeda‐Mendoza  Elizabeth Loza‐Rubio  Edith Rojas‐Anaya  Maria L Méndez‐Ojeda  Carlos F Arias  Alex D Greenwood
Institution:1. Department of Wildlife Diseases, Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW), Berlin, Germany;2. Centre for GeoGenetics, Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark;3. Centro Nacional de Investigación Disciplinaria en Microbiología Animal‐INIFAP, México City, Mexico;4. Facultad de Medicina Veterinaria y Zootecnia, Universidad Veracruzana, Veracruz, Mexico;5. Departamento de Genética del Desarrollo y Fisiología Molecular, Instituto de Biotecnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Chamilpa, Cuernavaca Morelos, Mexico;6. Department of Veterinary Medicine, Freie Universit?t Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Abstract:We characterized the nucleic acid‐sensing Toll‐like receptors (TLR) of a New World bat species, the common vampire bat (Desmodus rotundus), and through a comparative molecular evolutionary approach searched for general adaptation patterns among the nucleic acid‐sensing TLRs of eight different bats species belonging to three families (Pteropodidae, Vespertilionidae and Phyllostomidae). We found that the bat TLRs are evolving slowly and mostly under purifying selection and that the divergence pattern of such receptors is overall congruent with the species tree, consistent with the evolution of many other mammalian nuclear genes. However, the chiropteran TLRs exhibited unique mutations fixed in ligand‐binding sites, some of which involved nonconservative amino acid changes and/or targets of positive selection. Such changes could potentially modify protein function and ligand‐binding properties, as some changes were predicted to alter nucleic acid binding motifs in TLR 9. Moreover, evidence for episodic diversifying selection acting specifically upon the bat lineage and sublineages was detected. Thus, the long‐term adaptation of chiropterans to a wide variety of environments and ecological niches with different pathogen profiles is likely to have shaped the evolution of the bat TLRs in an order‐specific manner. The observed evolutionary patterns provide evidence for potential functional differences between bat and other mammalian TLRs in terms of resistance to specific pathogens or recognition of nucleic acids in general.
Keywords:bats  molecular evolution  nucleic acid‐sensing Toll‐like receptors  selection
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