| Literature DB >> 22224775 |
Thomas Boehm1, Nathanael McCurley, Yoichi Sutoh, Michael Schorpp, Masanori Kasahara, Max D Cooper.
Abstract
Lampreys and hagfish are primitive jawless vertebrates capable of mounting specific immune responses. Lampreys possess different types of lymphocytes, akin to T and B cells of jawed vertebrates, that clonally express somatically diversified antigen receptors termed variable lymphocyte receptors (VLRs), which are composed of tandem arrays of leucine-rich repeats. The VLRs appear to be diversified by a gene conversion mechanism involving lineage-specific cytosine deaminases. VLRA is expressed on the surface of T-like lymphocytes; B-like lymphocytes express and secrete VLRB as a multivalent protein. VLRC is expressed by a distinct lymphocyte lineage. VLRA-expressing cells appear to develop in a thymus-like tissue at the tip of gill filaments, and VLRB-expressing cells develop in hematopoietic tissues. Reciprocal expression patterns of evolutionarily conserved interleukins and chemokines possibly underlie cell-cell interactions during an immune response. The discovery of VLRs in agnathans illuminates the origins of adaptive immunity in early vertebrates.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22224775 PMCID: PMC3526378 DOI: 10.1146/annurev-immunol-020711-075038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Annu Rev Immunol ISSN: 0732-0582 Impact factor: 28.527