Bernstein R M, Schluter S F, Bernstein H, Marchalonis J J
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Arizona, College of Medicine, Tucson 85724, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1996 Sep 3;93(18):9454-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.93.18.9454.
The rearrangement of antibody and T-cell receptor gene segments is indispensable to the vertebrate immune response. All extant jawed vertebrates can rearrange these gene segments. This ability is conferred by the recombination activating genes I and II (RAG I and RAG II). To elucidate their origin and function, the cDNA encoding RAG I from a member of the most ancient class of extant gnathostomes, the Carcharhine sharks, was characterized. Homology domains identified within shark RAG I prompted sequence comparison analyses that suggested similarity of the RAG I and II genes, respectively, to the integrase family genes and integration host factor genes of the bacterial site-specific recombination system. Thus, the apparent explosive evolution (or "big bang") of the ancestral immune system may have been initiated by a transfer of microbial site-specific recombinases.
抗体和T细胞受体基因片段的重排对于脊椎动物的免疫反应至关重要。所有现存的有颌脊椎动物都能重排这些基因片段。这种能力由重组激活基因I和II(RAG I和RAG II)赋予。为了阐明它们的起源和功能,对编码现存最古老的有颌类成员之一——真鲨科鲨鱼的RAG I的cDNA进行了表征。在鲨鱼RAG I中鉴定出的同源结构域促使进行序列比较分析,结果表明RAG I和II基因分别与细菌位点特异性重组系统的整合酶家族基因和整合宿主因子基因相似。因此,祖先免疫系统明显的爆发式进化(或“大爆炸”)可能是由微生物位点特异性重组酶的转移引发的。