| Literature DB >> 18241342 |
Nicholas D Temperley1, Sofia Berlin, Ian R Paton, Darren K Griffin, David W Burt.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Toll-like receptors (TLRs) perform a vital role in disease resistance through their recognition of pathogen associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). Recent advances in genomics allow comparison of TLR genes within and between many species. This study takes advantage of the recently sequenced chicken genome to determine the complete chicken TLR repertoire and place it in context of vertebrate genomic evolution.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18241342 PMCID: PMC2275738 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-9-62
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Suggested changes in nomenclature of TLR genes
| Chicken | TLR15 | TLR 2 variant 2 | XM_419294 |
| TLR21 | hypothetical protein LOC415623 | NP_001025729 | |
| TLR1LA | TLR1 type1, TLR1/6/10, TLR1, TLR16 | AB109401 | |
| TLR1LB | TLR1 type2, TLR2, TLR6 | DQ518918 | |
| TLR2A | TLR2, TLR2 type1 | NM_204278 | |
| TLR2B | TLR2 type2 | AB046533 | |
| TLR5 | hypothetical LOC495313 | BC084773 | |
| Lamprey | TLR14a | TLRa | AB109402 |
| TLR14b | TLRb | AB109403 | |
| Rat | TLR13 | similar to toll-like receptor | XM_228540 |
| Japanese flounder | TLR22 | TLR3 | AB109396 |
| Goldfish | TLR22 | TLR | AY162178 |
| Rainbow trout | TLR22a | TLR | AJ628348 |
| TLR22b | TLRII | AJ878915 | |
| mouse | TLR12 | TLR11 | AY531552 |
Current name indicates those used by this paper following detailed phylogenetic and structural analyses.
Function and taxonomic presence of known TLRs
| TLR1 | Teleostei | Unknown | Mycobacteria | AC56430 | [10] |
| TLR1LikeA | Aves | Unknown | Unknown | AB109401 | [17] |
| TLR1LikeB | Aves | Unknown | Unknown | DQ518918 | [17] |
| TLR1 | Eutheria | Lipopeptide | Bacteria | AY009154 | [3] |
| TLR2 | Vertebrata | Lipopeptide and peptidoglycan | G+ bacteria | AC156432, NM_204278, NM_011905 | [3] |
| TLR3 | Vertebrata | dsRNA | Viruses | AC156436, NM_001011698, AF355152 | [3] |
| TLR4 | Vertebrata, but lost in most teleosts | LPS | G-bacteria | AY388400, AY064697, BC029856 | [3, 10] |
| TLR5 | Vertebrata | Flagellin | G-bacteria | AC156437, AJ626848, AF186107 | [3] |
| TLR5S | Teleostei | Flagellin | Bacteria | AB062504 | [36] |
| TLR6 | Eutheria | Lipopeptide and Zymosam | Bacteria | BC055366 | [3] |
| TLR7 | Vertebrata | Imiquimod | Viruses | AC156438, NM_001011688, AY035889 | [3] |
| TLR8 | Teleostei and mammalia | Imiquimod | Viruses | AC15639, AY035890 | [3] |
| TLR9 | Teleostei and mammalia | CpG motifs | Bacteria and viruses | AC156432, AF314224 | [3] |
| TLR10 | Mammalia | Unknown | Unknown | XM_223422 | [3] |
| TLR11 | murinae | Unknown | Unknown | AY501704, XM_373751 | |
| TLR12 | Mammalia | Profilin | Uropathogenic bacteria | AY351552*, AY510705, XM_342922 | [29, 30] |
| TLR13 | Amphibia and Mammalia | Unknown | Unknown | AY510706 | |
| TLR14 | Amphibia, Teleostei and Hyperoartia | Unknown | Unknown | AC156413 | [15] |
| TLR15 | Aves | Unknown | Unknown | XM_19294 | [13] |
| TLR16 | Amphibia | Unknown | Unknown | [15] | |
| TLR18 | Teleostei | Unknown | Mycobacteria | XM_682223 | [10] |
| TLR19 | Teleostei | Unknown | Unknown | XM_68516 | |
| TLR20 | Teleostei | Unknown | Mycobacteria | no full length sequence available | [10] |
| TLR21 | Teleostei and Aves | Unknown | Unknown | AB101002, NM_001030558 | [10, 15] |
| TLR22 | Teleostei | Unknown | Mycobacteria | AC156434 | [10] |
| TLR23 | Teleostei | Unknown | Unknown | AC1564345 |
TLRs are listed in numerical order along with pseudonyms found by this investigation and example GenBank accession numbers. Taxonomic coverage is inferred by the presence of sequences found in this investigation and corresponding phylogenetic data. The PAMP and pathogen data are reported as found in the cited literature.
* incorrectly described as TLR11 in the literature
Chicken TLR details
| TLR1LA | 4 | 71563594–71566050 | 1 | 818 | 2457 | 2457 | [15] | ||
| TLR1LB | 4 | 71553122–71555080 | 1 | 722 | 5005 | 1959 | [15] | ||
| TLR2A | 4 | 21105675–21108056 | 1 | 793 | 2382 | 2382 | [13, 31] | ||
| TLR2B | 4 | 21113342–21115936 | 1 | 781 | 2594 | 2346 | [13, 31] | ||
| TLR3 | 4 | 63155888–63160902 | 4 | 896 | 5015 | 2691 | [13-15] | ||
| TLR4 | 17 | 4062994–4067445 | 3 | 843 | 4452 | 2532 | [13-15] | ||
| TLR5 | 3 | 18975945–18978530 | 1 | 862 | 2589 | 2589 | [13, 14] | ||
| TLR7 | 1 | 126824071–126830542 | 2 | 1059 | 6381 | 3180 | [13-15] | ||
| TLR15 | 3 | 2945856–2948462 | 1 | 868 | 2607 | 2607 | [13] | ||
| TLR21 | 11 | 338885–342202 | 2 | 972 | 3317 | 2919 | [15] |
Figure 1Chicken TLR structures. SMART structure of chicken TLRs. Structures joined by { shows the two equally likely structures of TLR21. Dark blue rectangles represent trans-membrane regions while green bands indicate LRRs involved in PAMP recognition (LRR-TYP represents typical LRRs, whereas LRR represents LRR outliers). Light blue rectangles and circles represent L terminal and C terminal LRRs respectively, thin red bars represent signal peptides and thin pink bars segments of low compositional complexity. Motifs with the prefix PFAM represent those that are recognised by the PFAM database.
Figure 2Likelihood map of TLR protein alignment. The high density of points in the apexes of the triangle indicates the strong amount of structure and therefore great suitability for phylogenetic analysis.
Figure 3Phylogeny of TLR protein data using the Neighbour Joining method. Phylogeny is unrooted. The numbers at the nodes indicate percentage bootstrap values of the 1000 bootstrap replicates, only values greater than 50 are shown.
Figure 4Phylogeny of TLR protein data using Maximum Parsimony. Of 1386805 rearrangements tried three equally parsimonious trees were found, phylogeny is unrooted. The numbers at the nodes indicate percentage bootstrap values of the 1000 bootstrap replicates, only values greater than 50 are shown.