Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1QP, United Kingdom.
Department of Veterinary Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 0ES, United Kingdom; email:
Annu Rev Immunol. 2018 Apr 26;36:383-409. doi: 10.1146/annurev-immunol-051116-052450.
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is a large genetic region with many genes, including the highly polymorphic classical class I and II genes that play crucial roles in adaptive as well as innate immune responses. The organization of the MHC varies enormously among jawed vertebrates, but class I and II genes have not been found in other animals. How did the MHC arise, and are there underlying principles that can help us to understand the evolution of the MHC? This review considers what it means to be an MHC and the potential importance of genome-wide duplication, gene linkage, and gene coevolution for the emergence and evolution of an adaptive immune system. Then it considers what the original antigen-specific receptor and MHC molecule might have looked like, how peptide binding might have evolved, and finally the importance of adaptive immunity in general.
主要组织相容性复合体 (MHC) 是一个具有许多基因的大型遗传区域,包括高度多态性的经典 I 类和 II 类基因,它们在适应性和先天免疫反应中起着至关重要的作用。MHC 在有颌脊椎动物中的组织形式差异巨大,但在其他动物中并未发现 I 类和 II 类基因。MHC 是如何产生的,是否存在潜在的原则可以帮助我们理解 MHC 的进化?这篇综述考虑了 MHC 的含义,以及基因组倍增、基因连锁和基因共进化对适应性免疫系统的出现和进化的潜在重要性。然后,它考虑了原始抗原特异性受体和 MHC 分子可能的样子,肽结合是如何进化的,以及适应性免疫的重要性。