| Literature DB >> 33616658 |
Zhihui Deng1,2, Jianxin Zhen1,3, Genelle F Harrison4, Guobin Zhang1, Rui Chen1, Ge Sun1, Qiong Yu1, Neda Nemat-Gorgani5, Lisbeth A Guethlein5, Liumei He1, Mingzhong Tang6, Xiaojiang Gao7, Siqi Cai1, William H Palmer4, Jonathan A Shortt4, Christopher R Gignoux4, Mary Carrington8, Hongyan Zou1, Peter Parham5, Wenxu Hong9, Paul J Norman4,10.
Abstract
Human natural killer (NK) cells are essential for controlling infection, cancer, and fetal development. NK cell functions are modulated by interactions between polymorphic inhibitory killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIR) and polymorphic HLA-A, -B, and -C ligands expressed on tissue cells. All HLA-C alleles encode a KIR ligand and contribute to reproduction and immunity. In contrast, only some HLA-A and -B alleles encode KIR ligands and they focus on immunity. By high-resolution analysis of KIR and HLA-A, -B, and -C genes, we show that the Chinese Southern Han (CHS) are significantly enriched for interactions between inhibitory KIR and HLA-A and -B. This enrichment has had substantial input through population admixture with neighboring populations, who contributed HLA class I haplotypes expressing the KIR ligands B*46:01 and B*58:01, which subsequently rose to high frequency by natural selection. Consequently, over 80% of Southern Han HLA haplotypes encode more than one KIR ligand. Complementing the high number of KIR ligands, the CHS KIR locus combines a high frequency of genes expressing potent inhibitory KIR, with a low frequency of those expressing activating KIR. The Southern Han centromeric KIR region encodes strong, conserved, inhibitory HLA-C-specific receptors, and the telomeric region provides a high number and diversity of inhibitory HLA-A and -B-specific receptors. In all these characteristics, the CHS represent other East Asians, whose NK cell repertoires are thus enhanced in quantity, diversity, and effector strength, likely augmenting resistance to endemic viral infections.Entities:
Keywords: East Asia; HLA class I; KIR; adaptive introgression; admixture; infectious disease; natural killer cells
Year: 2021 PMID: 33616658 DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msab053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biol Evol ISSN: 0737-4038 Impact factor: 16.240