| Literature DB >> 35440514 |
Moriya Shmerling1, Michael Chalik1, Nechama I Smorodinsky1, Alan Meeker2, Sujayita Roy2, Orit Sagi-Assif1, Tsipi Meshel1, Artem Danilevsky3, Noam Shomron3, Shmuel Levinger1, Bar Nishry1, David Baruchi1, Avital Shargorodsky1, Ravit Ziv1, Avital Sarusi-Portuguez4, Maoz Lahav1, Marcelo Ehrlich1, Bryony Braschi5, Elspeth Bruford5,6, Isaac P Witz7, Daniel H Wreschner7.
Abstract
Syntenic genomic loci on human chromosome 8 and mouse chromosome 15 (mChr15) code for LY6/Ly6 (lymphocyte Ag 6) family proteins. The 23 murine Ly6 family genes include eight genes that are flanked by the murine Ly6e and Ly6l genes and form an Ly6 subgroup referred to in this article as the Ly6a subfamily gene cluster. Ly6a, also known as Stem Cell Ag-1 and T cell-activating protein, is a member of the Ly6a subfamily gene cluster. No LY6 genes have been annotated within the syntenic LY6E to LY6L human locus. We report in this article on LY6S, a solitary human LY6 gene that is syntenic with the murine Ly6a subfamily gene cluster, and with which it shares a common ancestry. LY6S codes for the IFN-inducible GPI-linked LY6S-iso1 protein that contains only 9 of the 10 consensus LY6 cysteine residues and is most highly expressed in a nonclassical spleen cell population. Its expression leads to distinct shifts in patterns of gene expression, particularly of genes coding for inflammatory and immune response proteins, and LY6S-iso1-expressing cells show increased resistance to viral infection. Our findings reveal the presence of a previously unannotated human IFN-stimulated gene, LY6S, which has a 1:8 ortholog relationship with the genes of the Ly6a subfamily gene cluster, is most highly expressed in spleen cells of a nonclassical cell lineage, and whose expression induces viral resistance and is associated with an inflammatory phenotype and with the activation of genes that regulate immune responses.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35440514 PMCID: PMC9574348 DOI: 10.4049/immunohorizons.2200018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunohorizons ISSN: 2573-7732