This project aims at investigating the molecular diversity and evolution of the MHC (HLA) genes involved in adaptive immunity in a large set of human populations in Africa.
Project scope
It will answer the question of whether genetic adaptations to pathogenic environments, which are thought to drive the evolution of MHC genes, have significantly modelled the genetic structure of populations in this continent, which will enlighten our knowledge on the evolutionary mechanisms that marked the history of our species.
To achieve this project, we are generating Third Generation Sequencing (TGS) data for 12 complete HLA genes in 50 African populations of distinct ethnicities, geographic places and ecoregions. We will then carry out a combination of population genetic/genomic and computational approaches, using genome-wide information as a control and taking into account the molecular specificity of each HLA gene/genic region, to explore the patterns of HLA diversity across all of Africa in relation to geographic, demographic, cultural and environmental parameters.
We are also producing new TGS data for Patr genes (homologous to HLA) in a cohort of Western chimpanzees to compare the mechanisms that generated MHC diversity in humans with those of their closest relatives.
Project innovations
Africa is at the heart of current debates on modern humans’ evolution and at the same time one of the regions of the world most severely exposed to infectious diseases. On the other hand, very few African populations have been genotyped for HLA at deep molecular levels so far.
The results of this study will bring unprecedented information on the mechanisms that drove the evolution of immune genes during the peopling history of this continent. The project will have a main impact in human genomics’ fundamental research by improving our understanding of human molecular variation in both a key region of the genome from a functional point of view, the MHC, and a key region of the world from a human evolutionary point of view, Africa.
Partenaires
- Hiba Babiker, Max Planck Institute
- Hacene Brouk, University Badji Mokhtar Service of Hemobiology and Blood Transfusion
- Viktor Cerny, Czech Academy of Sciences Institute of Archaeology
- Eric Crubézy, University Toulouse III Paul Sabatier UMR 5288 CNRS / AMIS
- Natasja G. De Groot, Biomedical Primate Research Centre Dpt of Comparative Genetics and Refinement
- Youssef Idaghdour, Department of Biology New York University Abu Dhabi
- Aashish Jha, Stanford University Department of Biomedical Data Science
- Bernhard Knapp, International University of Catalonia Bioinformatics and Immunoinformatics
- Mohammed Melhaoui, University Moammed 1st Laboratoire LEEDD
- Audrey Sabbagh, Paris Descartes University UMR 216 IRD MERIT School of Pharmacy
- Carina Schlebusch, University of Uppsala
- Himla Soodyall, University of Witwatersrand Department of Medicine Medical School
- Paul Verdu, Musée de l‘Homme UMR7206 Eco-Anthropologie CNRS/MNHN/University Paris Diderot
Sélection de publications en relation avec le projet
- Černý V., Kulichová I., Poloni ES., Nunes JM., Pereira L., Mayor A., Sanchez-Mazas A. (2018) Genetic history of the African Sahelian populations. HLA. doi: 10.1111/tan.13189. [Epub ahead of print] Review. doi: 10.1111/tan.13189.
- Goeury T., Creary LE., Brunet L., Galan M., Pasquier M., Kervaire B., Langaney A., Tiercy JM., Fernández-Viña MA., Nunes JM., Sanchez-Mazas A. (2018) Deciphering the fine nucleotide diversity of full HLA class I and class II genes in a well-documented population from sub-Saharan Africa. HLA 91(1):36-51. doi: 10.1111/tan.13180.
- Sanchez-Mazas A., Černý V., Di D., Buhler S., Podgorná E., Chevallier E., Brunet L., Weber S., Kervaire B., Testi M., Andreani M., Tiercy JM., Villard J., Nunes JM. (2017) The HLA-B landscape of Africa: Signatures of pathogen-driven selection and molecular identification of candidate alleles to malaria protection. Mol Ecol. 2017; 26:6238-6252. doi: 10.1111/mec.14366.
- Vangenot C., Nunes J.M., Doxiadis G.M., Poloni E.S., Bontrop R.E., De Groot N.G., Sanchez-Mazas A. (2020) Similar patterns of genetic diversity and linkage disequilibrium in Western chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes verus) and humans indicate highly conserved mechanisms of MHC molecular evolution. BMC Evol Biol 20, 119. doi: 10.1186/s12862-020-01669-6.