Bartl S, Baish M A, Flajnik M F, Ohta Y
Department of Biological Sciences, University of North Carolina at Wilmington 28403, USA.
J Immunol. 1997 Dec 15;159(12):6097-104.
Sharks are members of the most primitive class of vertebrates (Chondrichthyes) shown to have an adaptive immune system. Suprisingly, however, class I genes have not been identified unambiguously in this taxon, and absence of class I loci or a failure to express class I genes might explain some of the relatively "weak" adaptive immune responses documented in cartilaginous fish. We report here the isolation of three unique cDNA clones from two different species of sharks that encode bona fide class I proteins. These clones exhibit different sequence and expression profiles indicating that they are likely to represent both classical and nonclassical class I lineages. In addition, our preliminary analysis suggests that there may be transfer of gene segments among shark class I genes over evolutionary time. The cloning of shark class I genes completes the identification of molecules that define the adaptive immune system (including Ig, TCR, and MHC class II proteins) in this taxon. Thus, simple models invoking a total absence of certain molecular hallmarks of the immune system to account for poor immune responsiveness in cartilaginous fish should be abandoned.
鲨鱼是已被证明拥有适应性免疫系统的最原始脊椎动物类群(软骨鱼纲)的成员。然而,令人惊讶的是,在这个分类单元中尚未明确鉴定出I类基因,I类基因座的缺失或I类基因表达的失败可能解释了软骨鱼中记录的一些相对“较弱”的适应性免疫反应。我们在此报告从两种不同鲨鱼物种中分离出三个独特的cDNA克隆,它们编码真正的I类蛋白。这些克隆表现出不同的序列和表达谱,表明它们可能代表经典和非经典I类谱系。此外,我们的初步分析表明,在进化过程中,鲨鱼I类基因之间可能存在基因片段转移。鲨鱼I类基因的克隆完成了对该分类单元中定义适应性免疫系统的分子(包括Ig、TCR和MHC II类蛋白)的鉴定。因此,那些认为软骨鱼完全缺乏免疫系统某些分子特征以解释其免疫反应性差的简单模型应该被摒弃。