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Publication : Evolution of natural killer cell receptors: coexistence of functional Ly49 and KIR genes in baboons.

First Author  Mager DL Year  2001
Journal  Curr Biol Volume  11
Issue  8 Pages  626-30
PubMed ID  11369209 Mgi Jnum  J:68930
Mgi Id  MGI:1933713 Doi  10.1016/s0960-9822(01)00148-8
Citation  Mager DL, et al. (2001) Evolution of natural killer cell receptors: coexistence of functional Ly49 and KIR genes in baboons. Curr Biol 11(8):626-30
abstractText  Natural killer (NK) cells represent an important first line of defense against viruses and malignancy [1]. NK cells express a variety of inhibitory and activating receptors that interact with classical major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules on potential target cells and determine the NK cell response [2-4]. Mouse NK receptors are encoded by the C-type lectin multigene family Ly49. However, in humans, a completely different family of receptors, the immunoglobulin-like killer inhibitory receptors (KIRs), performs the same function [2-4]. One Ly49-like gene, Ly49L, exists in humans but is incorrectly spliced and assumed to be nonfunctional [5, 6]. Mouse KIR-like genes have not been found, and evidence suggests that the primate KIRs amplified after rodents and primates diverged [7, 8]. Thus, two structurally dissimilar families, Ly49 and KIR, have evolved to play similar roles in mouse and human NK cells. This apparent example of functional convergent evolution raises several questions. It is unknown, for example, when the Ly49L gene became nonfunctional and if this event affected the functional evolution of the KIRs. The distribution of these gene families in different mammals is unstudied, and it is not known if any species uses both types of receptors. Here, we demonstrate that the Ly49L gene shows evidence of conservation in other mammals and that the human gene likely became nonfunctional 6-10 million years ago. Furthermore, we show that baboon lymphocytes express both full-length Ly49L transcripts and multiple KIR genes.
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