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Evolution in primates by Catastrophic-selection interplay between enveloped virus epidemics, mutated genes of enzymes synthesizing carbohydrate antigens, and natural anti-carbohydrate antibodies

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
Volume 168, Issue 2, Pages 352-363

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.23745

Keywords

anti-Neu5Gc; anti-Gal; blood group Bombay; Neu5Gc; alpha-Gal epitope

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Catastrophic-selection is an evolutionary mechanism, by which entire parental-populations are eliminated but very few mutated offspring survive and replace extinct parental-populations. The human natural anti-carbohydrate antibodies, anti-Gal and anti-Neu5Gc suggest the occurrence of catastrophic-selection events in primate evolution. Parental-populations synthesizing corresponding carbohydrate-antigens underwent extinction in viral epidemics, and few offspring survived. These offspring carried accidental mutations that inactivated carbohydrate-antigen synthesis and produced natural-antibody against the lost antigen. Such natural anti-carbohydrate antibody was produced against environmental carbohydrate-antigens (e.g., gastrointestinal bacteria). The carbohydrate-antigen in infected parental-populations was also synthesized on viruses by the host glycosylation-machinery. The natural-antibody in the offspring bound to the carbohydrate-antigen on infecting viruses produced in parental-populations, destroyed the viruses and protected these offspring from extinction. This process occurred in ancestral Old-World monkeys and apes synthesizing alpha-gal epitopes, which were replaced 20-30 million-years-ago by offspring lacking alpha-gal epitopes and producing natural anti-Gal antibody against this antigen, and later in hominins synthesizing the sialic-acid antigen Neu5Gc, which were replaced by offspring lacking Neu5Gc and producing anti-Neu5Gc antibody. A present-day example for accidental mutations in very few humans that lost a common carbohydrate-antigen and produce a natural antibody against it is the rare blood-group Bombay individuals. These individuals lack the H-antigen (blood-group O) which is synthesized in all other humans, and produce the natural anti-H antibody against blood-group O. Overall, it is suggested that natural anti-carbohydrate antibodies played a critical role in preventing complete extinction of mammalian species in epidemics of highly virulent viruses and may have similar role in future events.

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