Kulski Jerzy K, Shiina Takashi, Anzai Tatsuya, Kohara Sakae, Inoko Hidetoshi
Department of Molecular Life Science, Tokai University School of Medicine, Bohseidai, Isehara, Kanagawa, Japan.
Immunol Rev. 2002 Dec;190:95-122. doi: 10.1034/j.1600-065x.2002.19008.x.
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genomic region is composed of a group of linked genes involved functionally with the adaptive and innate immune systems. The class I and class II genes are intrinsic features of the MHC and have been found in all the jawed vertebrates studied so far. The MHC genomic regions of the human and the chicken (B locus) have been fully sequenced and mapped, and the mouse MHC sequence is almost finished. Information on the MHC genomic structures (size, complexity, genic and intergenic composition and organization, gene order and number) of other vertebrates is largely limited or nonexistent. Therefore, we are mapping, sequencing and analyzing the MHC genomic regions of different human haplotypes and at least eight nonhuman species. Here, we review our progress with these sequences and compare the human MHC structure with that of the nonhuman primates (chimpanzee and rhesus macaque), other mammals (pigs, mice and rats) and nonmammalian vertebrates such as birds (chicken and quail), bony fish (medaka, pufferfish and zebrafish) and cartilaginous fish (nurse shark). This comparison reveals a complex MHC structure for mammals and a relatively simpler design for nonmammalian animals with a hypothetical prototypic structure for the shark. In the mammalian MHC, there are two to five different class I duplication blocks embedded within a framework of conserved nonclass I and/or nonclass II genes. With a few exceptions, the class I framework genes are absent from the MHC of birds, bony fish and sharks. Comparative genomics of the MHC reveal a highly plastic region with major structural differences between the mammalian and nonmammalian vertebrates. Additional genomic data are needed on animals of the reptilia, crocodilia and marsupial classes to find the origins of the class I framework genes and examples of structures that may be intermediate between the simple and complex MHC organizations of birds and mammals, respectively.
主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)基因组区域由一组与适应性和先天性免疫系统功能相关的连锁基因组成。I类和II类基因是MHC的固有特征,在迄今为止研究的所有有颌脊椎动物中都已发现。人类和鸡(B位点)的MHC基因组区域已被完全测序和定位,小鼠MHC序列也几乎完成。关于其他脊椎动物MHC基因组结构(大小、复杂性、基因和基因间组成与组织、基因顺序和数量)的信息在很大程度上有限或不存在。因此,我们正在对不同人类单倍型以及至少八种非人类物种的MHC基因组区域进行定位、测序和分析。在此,我们回顾这些序列的研究进展,并将人类MHC结构与非人类灵长类动物(黑猩猩和恒河猴)、其他哺乳动物(猪、小鼠和大鼠)以及非哺乳动物脊椎动物如鸟类(鸡和鹌鹑)、硬骨鱼(青鳉、河豚和斑马鱼)和软骨鱼(护士鲨)的MHC结构进行比较。这种比较揭示了哺乳动物的MHC结构复杂,而非哺乳动物动物的设计相对简单,鲨鱼具有假设的原型结构。在哺乳动物MHC中,有两到五个不同的I类重复模块嵌入在保守的非I类和/或非II类基因框架内。除了少数例外,鸟类、硬骨鱼和鲨鱼的MHC中不存在I类框架基因。MHC的比较基因组学揭示了一个高度可塑性的区域,哺乳动物和非哺乳动物脊椎动物之间存在主要结构差异。需要关于爬行纲、鳄目和有袋类动物的更多基因组数据,以找到I类框架基因的起源以及分别可能介于鸟类和哺乳动物简单与复杂MHC组织之间的结构示例。