Anzai Tatsuya, Shiina Takashi, Kimura Natsuki, Yanagiya Kazuyo, Kohara Sakae, Shigenari Atsuko, Yamagata Tetsushi, Kulski Jerzy K, Naruse Taeko K, Fujimori Yoshifumi, Fukuzumi Yasuhito, Yamazaki Masaaki, Tashiro Hiroyuki, Iwamoto Chie, Umehara Yumi, Imanishi Tadashi, Meyer Alice, Ikeo Kazuho, Gojobori Takashi, Bahram Seiamak, Inoko Hidetoshi
Department of Genetic Information, Division of Molecular Life Science, Tokai University School of Medicine, Bohseidai, Isehara, Kanagawa 259-1193, Japan.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Jun 24;100(13):7708-13. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1230533100. Epub 2003 Jun 10.
Despite their high degree of genomic similarity, reminiscent of their relatively recent separation from each other ( approximately 6 million years ago), the molecular basis of traits unique to humans vs. their closest relative, the chimpanzee, is largely unknown. This report describes a large-scale single-contig comparison between human and chimpanzee genomes via the sequence analysis of almost one-half of the immunologically critical MHC. This 1,750,601-bp stretch of DNA, which encompasses the entire class I along with the telomeric part of the MHC class III regions, corresponds to an orthologous 1,870,955 bp of the human HLA region. Sequence analysis confirms the existence of a high degree of sequence similarity between the two species. However, and importantly, this 98.6% sequence identity drops to only 86.7% taking into account the multiple insertions/deletions (indels) dispersed throughout the region. This is functionally exemplified by a large deletion of 95 kb between the virtual locations of human MICA and MICB genes, which results in a single hybrid chimpanzee MIC gene, in a segment of the MHC genetically linked to species-specific handling of several viral infections (HIV/SIV, hepatitis B and C) as well as susceptibility to various autoimmune diseases. Finally, if generalized, these data suggest that evolution may have used the mechanistically more drastic indels instead of the more subtle single-nucleotide substitutions for shaping the recently emerged primate species.
尽管人类和黑猩猩的基因组相似度很高,这让人联想到它们相对较近才彼此分离(大约600万年前),但与人类最亲近的亲属黑猩猩相比,人类特有的性状的分子基础在很大程度上仍不为人知。本报告通过对免疫关键的MHC近一半区域进行序列分析,描述了人类和黑猩猩基因组之间的大规模单重叠群比较。这段1,750,601碱基对的DNA片段,涵盖了整个I类以及MHC III类区域的端粒部分,对应于人类HLA区域的1,870,955碱基对直系同源序列。序列分析证实了这两个物种之间存在高度的序列相似性。然而,重要的是,考虑到整个区域分散的多个插入/缺失(indels),这种98.6%的序列同一性降至仅86.7%。这在功能上的一个例证是,人类MICA和MICB基因虚拟位置之间有一个95 kb的大缺失,这导致在与几种病毒感染(HIV/SIV、乙型和丙型肝炎)的物种特异性处理以及对各种自身免疫性疾病的易感性相关的MHC片段中,出现了一个单一的杂交黑猩猩MIC基因。最后,如果这些数据具有普遍性,那么这表明进化可能使用了机制上更为剧烈的插入/缺失,而非更为细微的单核苷酸替换来塑造最近出现的灵长类物种。