1. Genomics - We have assembled the core Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) genomic region(s) in a songbird, the great reed warbler, based on high quality DNA from a single individual. To achieve this, we produced several different types of state-of-the-art genomic data. The comparative work on the MHC genomic region(s) in four different songbird species, with a focus on the great reed warbler, is submitted and under review. We have been invited to present our results on songbird MHC genomics on conferences, seminars and workshops, and also contributed to two review papers.
2. Gene-expression - We have done RNASeq and IsoSeq to study full gene expression in both great reed warbler and house sparrow, and amplicon sequencing (MiSeq, local pipeline at LU) has been done to specifically study MHC-I gene expression in great reed warbler and house sparrow. MHC expression differs significantly between different MHC gene copies in songbirds and strong expression patterns are associated with MHC gene type. Moreover, the relative MHC expression in songbirds varies between bird families, suggesting that MHC diversity in genomic DNA overestimates the expressed diversity in some bird families, as shown in our recent publication.
3. Proteins – The crystal structure of the great reed warbler MHC-I protein Acar_3 has been characterized with high resolution with three different antigens and it unraveled an interesting antigen presenting properties that partly agrees and partly disagrees with antigen binding of classical human MHC proteins, and a manuscript is written, and planned for submission early 2022.
4. Host-pathogen interactions have been studied both in natural populations (great reed warblers in Lake Kvismaren Sweden and in house sparrows across Europe) and in experimental set-ups (house sparrows). The seasonal variation in diversity and prevalence of avian malaria varied between locations in house sparrows, as shown in our recent publication, and tended to be highest in mid-spring and early Autumn. The diversity and expression of MHC genes shows interesting patterns across Europe and our results will be submitted shortly. The house sparrow work has enrolled a large number of collaborators across Europe and I am very grateful for their engagement in my studies of MHC and avian malaria.