Reconstructing an ancestral mammalian immune supercomplex from a marsupial major histocompatibility complex

Date

2006-01-31

Authors

Belov, Katherine
Deakin, Janine
Papenfuss, Anthony T
Baker, Michelle L
Melman, Sandra D
Siddle, Hannah V
Gouin, Nicolas
Goode, David
Sargeant, Tobias
Robinson, Mark D

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Abstract

The first sequenced marsupial genome promises to reveal unparalleled insights into mammalian evolution. We have used theMonodelphis domestica (gray short-tailed opossum) sequence to construct the first map of a marsupial major histocompatibility complex (MHC). The MHC is the most gene-dense region of the mammalian genome and is critical to immunity and reproductive success. The marsupial MHC bridges the phylogenetic gap between the complex MHC of eutherian mammals and the minimal essential MHC of birds. Here we show that the opossum MHC is gene dense and complex, as in humans, but shares more organizational features with non-mammals. The Class I genes have amplified within the Class II region, resulting in a unique Class I/II region. We present a model of the organization of the MHC in ancestral mammals and its elaboration during mammalian evolution. The opossum genome, together with other extant genomes, reveals the existence of an ancestral “immune supercomplex” that contained genes of both types of natural killer receptors together with antigen processing genes and MHC genes.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: major histocompatibility antigen; natural killer cell receptor; antigen antibody complex; article; controlled study; evolution; gene amplification; genome; human; major histocompatibility complex; mammal; marsupial; nonhuman; nucleotide sequence; opossum;

Citation

PLoS Biology 4.3 (2006): e46

Source

PLoS Biology

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until