Andersen L C, Beaty J S, Nettles J W, Seyfried C E, Nepom G T, Nepoom B S
Virginia Mason Research Center, Seattle, Washington 98101.
J Exp Med. 1991 Jan 1;173(1):181-92. doi: 10.1084/jem.173.1.181.
Class II genes of the human major histocompatibility complex (MHC) are highly polymorphic. Allelic variation of structural genes provides diversity in immune cell interactions, contributing to the formation of the T cell repertoire and to susceptibility to certain autoimmune diseases. We now report that allelic polymorphism also exists in the promoter and upstream regulatory regions (URR) of human histocompatibility leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II genes. Nucleotide sequencing of these regulatory regions of seven alleles of the DQB locus reveals a number of allele-specific polymorphisms, some of which lie in functionally critical consensus regions thought to be highly conserved in class II promoters. These sequence differences also correspond to allelic differences in binding of nuclear proteins to the URR. Fragments of the URR of two DQB alleles were analyzed for binding to nuclear proteins extracted from human B lymphoblastoid cell lines (B-LCL). Gel retardation assays showed substantially different banding patterns to the two promoters, including prominent variation in nuclear protein binding to the partially conserved X box regions and a novel upstream polymorphic sequence element. Comparison of these two polymorphic alleles in a transient expression system demonstrated a marked difference in their promoter strengths determined by relative abilities to initiate transcription of the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter gene in human B-LCL. Shuttling of URR sequences between alleles showed that functional variation corresponded to both the X box and upstream sequence polymorphic sites. These findings identify an important source of MHC class II diversity, and suggest the possibility that such regulatory region polymorphisms may confer allelic differences in expression, inducibility, and/or tissue specificity of class II molecules.
人类主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)的II类基因具有高度多态性。结构基因的等位基因变异在免疫细胞相互作用中提供了多样性,有助于T细胞库的形成以及对某些自身免疫性疾病的易感性。我们现在报告,人类组织相容性白细胞抗原(HLA)II类基因的启动子和上游调控区(URR)中也存在等位基因多态性。对DQB位点七个等位基因的这些调控区进行核苷酸测序,发现了许多等位基因特异性多态性,其中一些位于功能关键的共有区域,这些区域被认为在II类启动子中高度保守。这些序列差异也对应于核蛋白与URR结合的等位基因差异。分析了两个DQB等位基因的URR片段与从人B淋巴母细胞系(B-LCL)中提取的核蛋白的结合情况。凝胶阻滞试验显示,这两个启动子的条带模式有很大不同,包括核蛋白与部分保守的X盒区域结合的显著差异以及一个新的上游多态性序列元件。在瞬时表达系统中对这两个多态性等位基因进行比较,结果表明它们的启动子强度存在显著差异,这是由在人B-LCL中启动氯霉素乙酰转移酶报告基因转录的相对能力决定的。等位基因之间URR序列的穿梭表明,功能变异与X盒和上游序列多态性位点都有关。这些发现确定了MHC II类多样性的一个重要来源,并提示这种调控区多态性可能赋予II类分子在表达、诱导性和/或组织特异性方面的等位基因差异。