First Author | Scott CL | Year | 1984 |
Journal | J Immunol | Volume | 132 |
Issue | 5 | Pages | 2638-43 |
PubMed ID | 6325542 | Mgi Jnum | J:109954 |
Mgi Id | MGI:3630130 | Doi | 10.4049/jimmunol.132.5.2638 |
Citation | Scott CL, et al. (1984) Variation in V lambda genes in the genus Mus. J Immunol 132(5):2638-43 |
abstractText | The complement of Ig V lambda genes in nine species of feral mice representing the four extant subgenera of the genus Mus was examined and compared with that of BALB/c inbred mice. Although all inbred strains examined have two V lambda genes, there is variation in the number of copies of V lambda genes in the wild mice. All feral representatives of M. musculus domesticus, from which inbred strains are derived, have at least three V lambda genes, indicating that a V lambda gene may have been lost during the inbreeding process. At least three V lambda genes are also found in representatives of three other M. musculus subspecies, including the stock of M. musculus musculus 'Czech II' shown to have at least 12 C lambda genes. In comparing the complement of V lambda and C lambda genes in these animals, evidence is found that supports a mechanism of lambda gene reiteration involving duplication of a unit containing a V lambda and two C lambda genes. However, the possibility that C lambda gene amplification occurred independent of V lambda gene evolution cannot be ruled out. M. spicelegus and M. spretus, species that are semifertile with M. musculus, have one to three V lambda genes. Species more distantly related to M. musculus, such as M. cookii and M. platythrix, appear to have more (four to six) V lambda genes. Greater V lambda gene heterogeneity is also found in these animals. We propose that the ancestors of the subgenus Mus had more V lambda genes than are seen in modern species and that the paucity of V lambda genes in M. musculus, M. spicelegus, and M. spretus may be the result of V lambda gene deletion events that occurred since the divergence of the ancestor of these three species and those of the distantly related species. |