Department of Structural Biology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, United States of America.
PLoS Genet. 2010 Nov 4;6(11):e1001192. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1001192.
Natural killer (NK) cells serve essential functions in immunity and reproduction. Diversifying these functions within individuals and populations are rapidly-evolving interactions between highly polymorphic major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I ligands and variable NK cell receptors. Specific to simian primates is the family of Killer cell Immunoglobulin-like Receptors (KIR), which recognize MHC class I and associate with a range of human diseases. Because KIR have considerable species-specificity and are lacking from common animal models, we performed extensive comparison of the systems of KIR and MHC class I interaction in humans and chimpanzees. Although of similar complexity, they differ in genomic organization, gene content, and diversification mechanisms, mainly because of human-specific specialization in the KIR that recognizes the C1 and C2 epitopes of MHC-B and -C. Humans uniquely focused KIR recognition on MHC-C, while losing C1-bearing MHC-B. Reversing this trend, C1-bearing HLA-B46 was recently driven to unprecedented high frequency in Southeast Asia. Chimpanzees have a variety of ancient, avid, and predominantly inhibitory receptors, whereas human receptors are fewer, recently evolved, and combine avid inhibitory receptors with attenuated activating receptors. These differences accompany human-specific evolution of the A and B haplotypes that are under balancing selection and differentially function in defense and reproduction. Our study shows how the qualitative differences that distinguish the human and chimpanzee systems of KIR and MHC class I predominantly derive from adaptations on the human line in response to selective pressures placed on human NK cells by the competing needs of defense and reproduction.
自然杀伤 (NK) 细胞在免疫和生殖中发挥着重要作用。在个体和人群中多样化这些功能的是高度多态的主要组织相容性复合体 (MHC) 类 I 配体与可变 NK 细胞受体之间快速进化的相互作用。灵长类动物特有的是杀伤细胞免疫球蛋白样受体 (KIR) 家族,它识别 MHC 类 I 并与一系列人类疾病相关。由于 KIR 具有相当大的物种特异性,并且在常见的动物模型中缺乏,我们对人类和黑猩猩中 KIR 和 MHC 类 I 相互作用的系统进行了广泛的比较。尽管它们的复杂性相似,但它们在基因组组织、基因含量和多样化机制上存在差异,主要是因为人类 KIR 在识别 MHC-B 和 -C 的 C1 和 C2 表位方面具有特异性。人类独特地将 KIR 识别集中在 MHC-C 上,同时失去了带有 C1 的 MHC-B。相反,带有 C1 的 HLA-B46 最近在东南亚被驱动到前所未有的高频率。黑猩猩具有多种古老、强烈且主要是抑制性的受体,而人类受体较少、最近进化,并将强烈的抑制性受体与减弱的激活受体结合。这些差异伴随着人类 A 和 B 单倍型的特异性进化,这些单倍型受到平衡选择的影响,并在防御和生殖中发挥不同的功能。我们的研究表明,区分人类和黑猩猩 KIR 和 MHC 类 I 系统的定性差异主要源自人类谱系的适应,以应对防御和生殖对人类 NK 细胞的竞争需求所带来的选择压力。