Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Jeon HB" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Intraspecific complexity in mercury contamination of two harvested fishes revealed by genetics: Food security and conservation implications Gibelli J; Michaelides S; Won H; Chamlian B; Bampfylde C; Maclean B; Giroux P; Gray QZ; Voyageur M; Jeon HB; Bouchard R; Fraser DJ; 41380599
BIOLOGY
2 Genomics-Enabled Mixed-Stock Analysis Uncovers Intraspecific Migratory Complexity and Detects Unsampled Populations in a Harvested Fish Gibelli J; Won H; Michaelides S; Jeon HB; Fraser DJ; 39995301
BIOLOGY
3 Widespread admixture blurs population structure and confounds Lake Trout (Salvelinus namaycush) conservation even in the genomic era Bernos TA; Gibelli J; Michaelides S; Won H; Jeon HB; Marin K; Boguski DA; Janjua MY; Gallagher CP; Howland KL; Fraser DJ; 39730611
BIOLOGY
4 Development of SNP Panels from Low-Coverage Whole Genome Sequencing (lcWGS) to Support Indigenous Fisheries for Three Salmonid Species in Northern Canada Beemelmanns A; Bouchard R; Michaelides S; Normandeau E; Jeon HB; Chamlian B; Babin C; Hénault P; Perrot O; Harris LN; Zhu X; Fraser D; Bernatchez L; Moore JS; 39552382
BIOLOGY
5 Phylogeography of the Korean endemic Coreoleuciscus (Cypriniformes: Gobionidae): the genetic evidence of colonization through Eurasian continent to the Korean Peninsula during Late Plio-Pleistocene Jeon HB; Song HY; Suk HY; Bang IC; 35438462
BIOLOGY
6 Neutral and adaptive drivers of genomic change in introduced brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis) populations revealed by pooled sequencing Brookes B; Jeon HB; Derry AM; Post JR; Rogers SM; Humphries S; Fraser DJ; 35154655
BIOLOGY
7 Differential patterns of diversity at neutral and adaptive loci in endangered Rhodeus pseudosericeus populations Won H; Jeon HB; Kim DY; Suk HY; 34354168
BIOLOGY
8 Early Life History of Coreoperca herzi in Han River, Korea. Park JM, Jeon HB, Suk HY, Cho SJ, Han KH 32411919
BIOLOGY
9 Evidence of an ancient connectivity and biogeodispersal of a bitterling species, Rhodeus notatus, across the Korean Peninsula. Won H; Jeon HB; Suk HY; 31974505
BIOLOGY
10 Polymorphism of MHC class IIB in an acheilognathid species, Rhodeus sinensis shaped by historical selection and recombination. Jeon HB, Won H, Suk HY 31519169
BIOLOGY

 

Title:Polymorphism of MHC class IIB in an acheilognathid species, Rhodeus sinensis shaped by historical selection and recombination.
Authors:Jeon HBWon HSuk HY
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31519169?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.1186/s12863-019-0775-3
Publication:BMC genetics
Keywords:Balancing selectionBitterlingsIntronlessMajor histocompatibility complexRhodeus sinensisTrans-species polymorphism
PMID:31519169 Category:BMC Genet Date Added:2019-09-15
Dept Affiliation: BIOLOGY
1 Department of Life Sciences, Yeungnam University, 280 Daehak-ro, Gyeongsan, Gyeongsangbuk-do, 38541, South Korea.
2 Department of Biology, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke W, Montreal, Quebec, H4B 1R6, Canada.
3 Department of Life Sciences, Yeungnam University, 280 Daehak-ro, Gyeongsan, Gyeongsangbuk-do, 38541, South Korea. hsuk@ynu.ac.kr.

Description:

Polymorphism of MHC class IIB in an acheilognathid species, Rhodeus sinensis shaped by historical selection and recombination.

BMC Genet. 2019 Sep 13;20(1):74

Authors: Jeon HB, Won H, Suk HY

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Rhodeus sinensis is a bitterling species occurring throughout the numerous freshwater systems on the East Asia. Here, we analyzed the diversity of the MHC class IIB (DAB) genes from this species, which may offer meaningful insights into evolutionary processes in this species as well as other bitterlings.

RESULTS: Using cDNA and gDNA samples from 50 individuals, we discovered classical 140 allelic sequences that could be allocated into either DAB1 (Rhsi-DAB1) or DAB3 (Rhsi-DAB3). DAB sequences completely lacking the intron, but identical or similar to Rhsi-DAB1, were also discovered from our gDNA samples, and this intron loss likely originated from the retrotransposition events of processed mDNA. The ß1 domain was the most polymorphic in both Rhsi-DAB1 and -DAB3. Putative peptide biding residues (PBRs) in Rhsi-DAB1, but not in Rhsi-DAB3, exhibited a significant dN/dS, presumably indicating that different selection pressures have acted on those two DABs. Recombination between different alleles seemed to have contributed to the increase of diversity in Rhsi-DABs. Upon phylogenetic analysis, Rhsi-DAB1 and -DAB3 formed independent clusters. Several alleles from other species of Cypriniformes were embedded in the clade of Rhsi-DAB1, whereas Rhsi-DAB3 clustered with alleles from the wider range of taxa (Cyprinodontiformes), indicating that these two Rhsi-DABs have taken different historical paths.

CONCLUSIONS: A great deal of MHC class IIB allelic diversity was found in R. sinensis, and gene duplication, selection and recombination may have contributed to this diversity. Based on our data, it is presumed that such historical processes have commonly or differently acted on the polymorphism of Rhsi-DAB1 and -DAB3.

PMID: 31519169 [PubMed - in process]





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