生物
主要组织相容性复合体
MHC I级
遗传学
受体
免疫学
进化生物学
基因
作者
Lisbeth A. Guethlein,Paul J. Norman,Hugo G. Hilton,Peter Parham
摘要
Summary Shaping natural killer ( NK ) cell functions in human immunity and reproduction are diverse killer cell immunoglobulin‐like receptors ( KIR s) that recognize polymorphic MHC class I determinants. A survey of placental mammals suggests that KIR s serve as variable NK cell receptors only in certain primates and artiodactyls. Divergence of the functional and variable KIR s in primates and artiodactyls predates placental reproduction. Among artiodactyls, cattle but not pigs have diverse KIR s. Catarrhine (humans, apes, and Old World monkeys) and platyrrhine (New World monkeys) primates, but not prosimians, have diverse KIR s. Platyrrhine and catarrhine systems of KIR and MHC class I are highly diverged, but within the catarrhines, a stepwise co‐evolution of MHC class I and KIR is discerned. In Old World monkeys, diversification focuses on MHC ‐A and MHC ‐B and their cognate lineage II KIR . With evolution of C1‐bearing MHC ‐C from MHC ‐B, as informed by orangutan, the focus changes to MHC ‐C and its cognate lineage III KIR . Evolution of C2 from C1 and fixation of MHC ‐C drove further elaboration of MHC ‐C‐specific KIR , as exemplified by chimpanzee. In humans, the evolutionary trajectory changes again. Emerging from reorganization of the KIR locus and selective attenuation of KIR avidity for MHC class I are the functionally distinctive KIR A and KIR B haplotypes.
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