Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Mol Immunol. 2013 Sep;55(2):159-61. doi: 10.1016/j.molimm.2012.10.030. Epub 2012 Nov 22.
Most detailed knowledge of the MHC outside of mammals has come from studies of chickens, originally due to the economic importance of the poultry industry. We have used our discoveries about the chicken MHC to develop a framework for understanding the evolution of the MHC, based on the importance of genomic organisation for gene co-evolution. In humans, MHC class I molecules are polymorphic and determine the specificity of peptide presentation, while the molecules involved in antigen processing are functionally monomorphic. The genes for tapasin, transporters associated with antigen presentation (TAPs) and inducible proteasome components (LMPs) are located in and beyond the class II region, far away from the class I genes in the class I region. In contrast, chickens express only one class I locus at high levels, which can result in strong MHC associations with resistance to particular infectious pathogens. The chicken TAP and tapasin genes are located very close to the class I genes, and have high levels of allelic polymorphism and moderate sequence diversity, co-evolving their specificities to work optimally with the dominantly expressed class I molecule. The salient features of the chicken MHC are found in many if not most non-mammalian species examined, and are likely to represent the ancestral organisation of the MHC. Comparison with the MHC organisation of humans and typical mammals suggests that a large inversion brought the class III region into the middle of the MHC, separating the antigen processing genes from the class I gene, breaking the co-evolutionary relationships and allowing a multigene family of well-expressed class I genes. Such co-evolution in the primordial MHC was likely responsible for the appearance of the antigen presentation pathways and receptor-ligand interactions at the birth of the adaptive immune system. Of course, much further work is required to understand this evolutionary framework in more detail.
哺乳动物之外的 MHC 最详细的知识来自对鸡的研究,最初是因为家禽业的经济重要性。我们利用我们对鸡 MHC 的发现,基于基因组组织对基因共进化的重要性,为理解 MHC 的进化发展了一个框架。在人类中,MHC I 类分子是多态的,决定了肽呈递的特异性,而参与抗原加工的分子在功能上是单态的。tapasin、抗原呈递相关转运体(TAPs)和诱导蛋白酶体成分(LMPs)的基因位于 II 类区内部和之外,远离 I 类区中的 I 类基因。相比之下,鸡只高水平表达一个 I 类基因座,这可能导致 MHC 与特定传染性病原体的抗性之间存在强烈关联。鸡 TAP 和 tapasin 基因非常靠近 I 类基因,具有高水平的等位基因多态性和适度的序列多样性,它们的特异性共进化以与优势表达的 I 类分子最佳协同工作。鸡 MHC 的显著特征在许多(如果不是大多数)检查过的非哺乳动物物种中都有发现,并且可能代表 MHC 的祖先组织。与人类和典型哺乳动物的 MHC 组织比较表明,一个大的倒位将 III 类区带入 MHC 的中间,将抗原加工基因与 I 类基因分开,打破了共进化关系,并允许一个具有良好表达能力的 I 类基因的多基因家族。这种原始 MHC 中的共进化可能是适应性免疫系统诞生时抗原呈递途径和受体-配体相互作用出现的原因。当然,要更详细地了解这个进化框架,还需要做更多的工作。