Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
Unraveling the LRC Evolution in Mammals : IGSF1 and A1BG Provide the Keys. / Guselnikov, Sergey V.; Taranin, Alexander V.
в: Genome Biology and Evolution, Том 11, № 6, evz102, 24.05.2019, стр. 1586-1601.Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Unraveling the LRC Evolution in Mammals
T2 - IGSF1 and A1BG Provide the Keys
AU - Guselnikov, Sergey V.
AU - Taranin, Alexander V.
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.
PY - 2019/5/24
Y1 - 2019/5/24
N2 - Receptors of the leukocyte receptor cluster (LRC) play a range of important functions in the human immune system. However, the evolution of the LRC remains poorly understood, even in m\ammals not to mention nonmammalian vertebrates. We conducted a comprehensive bioinformatics analysis of the LRC-related genes in the publicly available genomes of six species that represent eutherian, marsupial, and monotreme lineages of mammals. As a result, the LRCs of African elephant and armadillo were characterized, two new genes, IGSF1 and A1BG, were attributed to the LRC of eutherian mammals, the LRC gene content was substantially extended in the short-tailed opossum and Tasmanian devil and, finally, four LRC genes were identified in the platypus genome. These findings have for the first time provided a solid basis for inference of the LRC phylogeny across mammals. Our analysis suggests that the mammalian LRC family likely derived from two ancestral genes, which evolved in a lineage-specific manner by expansion/contraction, extensive exon shuffling, and sequence divergence. The striking structural and functional diversity of eutherian LRC molecules appears largely lineage specific. The only family member retained in all the three mammalian lineages is a collagen-binding receptor OSCAR. Strong sequence conservation of a transmembrane domain known to associate with FcRγ suggests an adaptive role of this domain subtype in the LRC evolution.
AB - Receptors of the leukocyte receptor cluster (LRC) play a range of important functions in the human immune system. However, the evolution of the LRC remains poorly understood, even in m\ammals not to mention nonmammalian vertebrates. We conducted a comprehensive bioinformatics analysis of the LRC-related genes in the publicly available genomes of six species that represent eutherian, marsupial, and monotreme lineages of mammals. As a result, the LRCs of African elephant and armadillo were characterized, two new genes, IGSF1 and A1BG, were attributed to the LRC of eutherian mammals, the LRC gene content was substantially extended in the short-tailed opossum and Tasmanian devil and, finally, four LRC genes were identified in the platypus genome. These findings have for the first time provided a solid basis for inference of the LRC phylogeny across mammals. Our analysis suggests that the mammalian LRC family likely derived from two ancestral genes, which evolved in a lineage-specific manner by expansion/contraction, extensive exon shuffling, and sequence divergence. The striking structural and functional diversity of eutherian LRC molecules appears largely lineage specific. The only family member retained in all the three mammalian lineages is a collagen-binding receptor OSCAR. Strong sequence conservation of a transmembrane domain known to associate with FcRγ suggests an adaptive role of this domain subtype in the LRC evolution.
KW - A1BG
KW - GPVI
KW - IGSF1
KW - marsupial
KW - monotreme
KW - OSCAR
KW - TASMANIAN DEVIL
KW - COLLAGEN RECEPTOR
KW - IG-LIKE RECEPTORS
KW - HLA-G
KW - GLYCOPROTEIN VI
KW - FAMILY
KW - FC-RECEPTOR
KW - LEUKOCYTE RECEPTOR COMPLEX
KW - INHIBITORY RECEPTOR
KW - CELL
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85067902149&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/gbe/evz102
DO - 10.1093/gbe/evz102
M3 - Article
C2 - 31106814
AN - SCOPUS:85067902149
VL - 11
SP - 1586
EP - 1601
JO - Genome Biology and Evolution
JF - Genome Biology and Evolution
SN - 1759-6653
IS - 6
M1 - evz102
ER -
ID: 20707782