Publication | Closed Access
Diversity and Function of Adaptive Immune Receptors in a Jawless Vertebrate
315
Citations
19
References
2005
Year
Adaptive Immune SystemImmunologyAntigen ProcessingImmune SystemImmunotherapyCell SignalingImmunological MemoryJawless FishVlr GeneAllergyAutoimmune DiseaseAdaptive Immune ReceptorsReceptor (Biochemistry)AutoimmunityImmune FunctionAnthrax SporesBiologySignal TransductionImmune Cell DevelopmentPathogenesisImmunoglobulin EJawless VertebrateSystems BiologyMedicine
Instead of the immunoglobulin-type antigen receptors of jawed vertebrates, jawless fish have variable lymphocyte receptors (VLRs), which consist of leucine-rich repeat (LRR) modules. Somatic diversification of the VLR gene is shown here to occur through a multistep assembly of LRR modules randomly selected from a large bank of flanking cassettes. The predicted concave surface of the VLR is lined with hypervariable positively selected residues, and computational analysis suggests a repertoire of about 10(14) unique receptors. Lamprey immunized with anthrax spores responded with the production of soluble antigen-specific VLRs. These findings reveal that two strikingly different modes of antigen recognition through rearranged lymphocyte receptors have evolved in the jawless and jawed vertebrates.
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