Publication | Open Access
Escape from bacterial iron piracy through rapid evolution of transferrin
186
Citations
28
References
2014
Year
BacteriologyInnate ImmunityBacterial PathogensHost ResponseBacterial Iron PiracyPathogen TransmissionExtremophileMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyHost GeneticsPublic HealthHost-pathogen InteractionsC2 Transferrin PolymorphismTbpa BindingHost-microbe InteractionMolecular MicrobiologyMicrobiomeIron SequestrationBiologyPathogenesisMicrobiologyMedicine
Iron sequestration provides an innate defense, termed nutritional immunity, leading pathogens to scavenge iron from hosts. Although the molecular basis of this battle for iron is established, its potential as a force for evolution at host-pathogen interfaces is unknown. We show that the iron transport protein transferrin is engaged in ancient and ongoing evolutionary conflicts with TbpA, a transferrin surface receptor from bacteria. Single substitutions in transferrin at rapidly evolving sites reverse TbpA binding, providing a mechanism to counteract bacterial iron piracy among great apes. Furthermore, the C2 transferrin polymorphism in humans evades TbpA variants from Haemophilus influenzae, revealing a functional basis for standing genetic variation. These findings identify a central role for nutritional immunity in the persistent evolutionary conflicts between primates and bacterial pathogens.
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