Hedley M L, Hunt S W, Brorson K A, Andris J S, Hood L, Forman J, Tucker P W
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas 75235.
Immunogenetics. 1989;29(6):359-65. doi: 10.1007/BF00375863.
The mouse major histocompatibility complex is composed of several genes arranged into the K, D, Qa, and Tla regions. The D region of the BALB/c mouse includes genes D2d, D3d, and D4d, in addition to H-2Dd and H-2Ld. We have determined the DNA sequence of the D2d gene and compared it with the known sequences of several class I genes. The exon/intron structure of the D2d gene is similar to other class I genes. It also contains similar 5' regulatory elements. A frameshift occurs in exon seven, resulting in a gene product with a truncated cytoplasmic tail. To examine the surface expression of the D2d molecule, we generated an exon-shuffled construct containing the promoter and exons 1-3, encoding the signal peptide, alpha 1, and alpha 2 external domains of the D2d gene linked to exons 4-8, encoding the alpha 3, transmembrane and cytoplasmic domains, of the H-2Dd gene. The construct was transfected into mouse L cells, and a protein was detected at the cell surface by a monoclonal antibody (mAb) specific for the alpha 3 domain of H-2Dd, as well as by other class I-specific mAbs. Although D2d is expressed at low levels, it may be a functional class I gene that most probably evolved from a Qa region gene.