| Literature DB >> 10557312 |
T Shiina1, G Tamiya, A Oka, N Takishima, T Yamagata, E Kikkawa, K Iwata, M Tomizawa, N Okuaki, Y Kuwano, K Watanabe, Y Fukuzumi, S Itakura, C Sugawara, A Ono, M Yamazaki, H Tashiro, A Ando, T Ikemura, E Soeda, M Kimura, S Bahram, H Inoko.
Abstract
The intensely studied MHC has become the paradigm for understanding the architectural evolution of vertebrate multigene families. The 4-Mb human MHC (also known as the HLA complex) encodes genes critically involved in the immune response, graft rejection, and disease susceptibility. Here we report the continuous 1,796,938-bp genomic sequence of the HLA class I region, linking genes between MICB and HLA-F. A total of 127 genes or potentially coding sequences were recognized within the analyzed sequence, establishing a high gene density of one per every 14.1 kb. The identification of 758 microsatellite provides tools for high-resolution mapping of HLA class I-associated disease genes. Most importantly, we establish that the repeated duplication and subsequent diversification of a minimal building block, MIC-HCGIX-3.8-1-P5-HCGIV-HLA class I-HCGII, engendered the present-day MHC. That the currently nonessential HLA-F and MICE genes have acted as progenitors to today's immune-competent HLA-ABC and MICA/B genes provides experimental evidence for evolution by "birth and death," which has general relevance to our understanding of the evolutionary forces driving vertebrate multigene families.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1999 PMID: 10557312 PMCID: PMC23939 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.96.23.13282
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205