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免疫反应的起源与累积进化。

The ancestry and cumulative evolution of immune reactions.

作者信息

Dzik Jolanta M

机构信息

Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology, Department of Biochemistry, Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Warszawa, Poland.

出版信息

Acta Biochim Pol. 2010;57(4):443-66. Epub 2010 Nov 1.

Abstract

The last two decades of study enriched greatly our knowledge of how the immune system originated and the sophisticated immune mechanisms of today's vertebrates and invertebrates developed. Even unicellular organisms possess mechanisms for pathogen destruction and self recognition. The ability to distinguish self from non-self is a prerequisite for recognition of sexual compatibility and ensuring survival. Molecules involved in these processes resemble those found in the phagocytic cells of higher organisms. Recognition of bacteria by scavenger receptors induces phagocytosis or endocytosis. The phagocytic mechanisms characterizing the amoeboid protozoans developed further during the evolution towards innate immunity. The scavenger receptor cysteine-rich domain SRCR is encoded in the genomes from the most primitive sponges to mammals. The immune system of sponges comprises signal transduction molecules which occur in higher metazoans as well. Sponges already possess recognition systems for pathogenic bacteria and fungi, based on membrane receptors (a lipopolysaccharide-interacting protein, a cell surface receptor recognizing β(1 → 3)-d-glucans of fungi). Perforin-like molecules and lysozymes are involved, among others, in defense in sponges. Reactive oxygen and nitrogen species function in the immunity of early metazoan. Genes encoding the family of reactive oxygen-generating NADPH oxidases (Noxes) are found in a variety of protists and plants. The NO synthases of cnidarians, mollusks, and chordates are conserved with respect to the mammalian NOS. The antimicrobial peptides of protozoans, amoebapores, are structural and functional analogs of the natural killer cell peptide, NK-lysin, of vertebrates. An ancestral S-type lectin has been found in sponges. Opsonizing properties of lectins and the ability to agglutinate cells justify their classification as primitive recognition molecules. Invertebrate cytokines are not homologous to those of vertebrate, and their functional convergence was presumably enabled by the general similarity of the lectin-like recognition domain three-dimensional structure. Sponges contain molecules with SCR/CCP domains that show high homology to the mammalian regulators of complement activation (RCA family). A multi-component complement system comprising at least the central molecule of the complement system, C3, Factor B, and MASP developed in the cnidarians and evolved into the multilevel cascade engaged in innate and acquired immunity of vertebrates. The adaptive immune system of mammals is also deeply rooted in the metazoan evolution. Some its precursors have been traced as deep as in sponges, namely, two classes of receptors that comprise Ig-like domains, the receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK), and the non-enzymic sponge adhesion molecules (SAM). The antibody-based immune system defined by the presence of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), T-cell receptor (TCR), B-cell receptor (BCR) or recombination activating genes (RAGs) is known beginning from jawed fishes. However, genes closely resembling RAG1 and RAG2 have been uncovered in the genome of a see urchin. The ancestry of MHC gene remains unknown. Similarly, no homologue of the protein binding domain (PBD) in MHC molecules has been found in invertebrates. The pathway by which endogenous peptides are degraded for presentation with class I MHC molecules utilizes mechanisms similar to those involved in the normal turnover of intracellular proteins, apparently recruited to work also for the immune system. Several cDNAs coding for lysosomal enzymes, e.g., cathepsin, have been isolated from sponges. All chromosomal duplication events in the MHC region occurred after the origin of the agnathans but before the gnathostomes split from them. The V-domains of the subtype found in the receptors of T and B-cells are known from both agnathans and cephalochordates, although they do not rearrange. The rearrangement mechanism of the lymphocyte V-domains suggests its origin from a common ancestral domain existing before the divergence of the extant gnathostome classes. Activation-induced deaminase (AID) - homologous proteins have been found only in the gnathostomes. It appears thus that the adaptive immunity of vertebrates is a result of stepwise accumulation of small changes in molecules, cells and organs over almost half a billion years.

摘要

过去二十年的研究极大地丰富了我们对于免疫系统起源以及当今脊椎动物和无脊椎动物复杂免疫机制如何发展的认识。即使是单细胞生物也具备病原体破坏和自我识别机制。区分自我与非自我的能力是识别性相容性和确保生存的先决条件。参与这些过程的分子与高等生物吞噬细胞中发现的分子相似。清道夫受体对细菌的识别会诱导吞噬作用或胞吞作用。在向先天免疫进化的过程中,变形虫原生动物所特有的吞噬机制得到了进一步发展。富含半胱氨酸的清道夫受体结构域(SRCR)在从最原始的海绵到哺乳动物的基因组中均有编码。海绵的免疫系统包含在高等后生动物中也存在的信号转导分子。海绵已经拥有基于膜受体(一种脂多糖相互作用蛋白、一种识别真菌β(1 → 3)-d-葡聚糖的细胞表面受体)的病原菌和真菌识别系统。穿孔素样分子和溶菌酶等参与海绵的防御。活性氧和氮物质在早期后生动物的免疫中发挥作用。编码产生活性氧的NADPH氧化酶(Noxes)家族的基因在多种原生生物和植物中都有发现。刺胞动物、软体动物和脊索动物的一氧化氮合酶与哺乳动物的一氧化氮合酶具有保守性。原生动物的抗菌肽——变形虫孔蛋白,是脊椎动物自然杀伤细胞肽NK-溶素的结构和功能类似物。在海绵中发现了一种祖先型S型凝集素。凝集素的调理特性和凝集细胞的能力证明它们可被归类为原始识别分子。无脊椎动物细胞因子与脊椎动物的细胞因子不同源,它们功能上的趋同可能是由于凝集素样识别结构域三维结构的总体相似性所致。海绵含有与哺乳动物补体激活调节因子(RCA家族)具有高度同源性的含SCR/CCP结构域的分子。一个至少由补体系统的核心分子C3、因子B和MASP组成的多组分补体系统在刺胞动物中形成,并进化为参与脊椎动物先天免疫和获得性免疫的多级级联反应。哺乳动物的适应性免疫系统也深深植根于后生动物的进化过程中。它的一些前体可以追溯到海绵,即两类包含免疫球蛋白样结构域的受体、受体酪氨酸激酶(RTK)和非酶性海绵粘附分子(SAM)。由主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)、T细胞受体(TCR)、B细胞受体(BCR)或重组激活基因(RAGs)的存在所定义的基于抗体的免疫系统从有颌鱼类开始就已为人所知。然而,在海胆的基因组中发现了与RAG1和RAG2非常相似的基因。MHC基因的起源仍然未知。同样,在无脊椎动物中未发现MHC分子中蛋白质结合结构域(PBD)的同源物。内源性肽被降解以与I类MHC分子呈递的途径利用了与细胞内蛋白质正常周转所涉及的机制相似的机制,显然这些机制也被招募用于免疫系统。已经从海绵中分离出了几种编码溶酶体酶(如组织蛋白酶)的cDNA。MHC区域的所有染色体复制事件都发生在无颌类动物起源之后,但在有颌类动物从它们分化之前。在无颌类动物和头索动物中都已知T细胞和B细胞受体中发现的亚型的V结构域,尽管它们不会重排。淋巴细胞V结构域的重排机制表明它起源于现存有颌类动物类群分化之前存在的一个共同祖先结构域。激活诱导脱氨酶(AID)——同源蛋白仅在有颌类动物中被发现。因此,脊椎动物的适应性免疫似乎是近5亿年来分子、细胞和器官中小变化逐步积累的结果。

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