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1.
 Although many human major histocompatibility genes have been identified, relatively few have been localized to the class I region. We searched for new class I region genes by sample sequencing, a process in which short stretches of random genomic sequence are generated from cosmids and then compared with sequences deposited in nucleotide databases. Four class I region cosmids were isolated for sample sequencing by screening a chromosome 6 specific cosmid library with probes derived from specific class I region genes or with overlapping class I region yeast artificial chromosomes. Cosmids were sonnicated to produce fragments of 0.5 – 1 kilobases, subcloned, and sequenced using an automated sequencer. Sequences were then compared with nucleotide sequences deposited in the GenBank databases using the BLASTN algorithm. A number of potential new class I region genes were identified, including a cDNA with similarity to the tre oncogene, the trans-activating factor SC1 (TCF19), and a member of the interferon inducible 1 – 8 gene family. These observations suggest that sample sequencing is an efficient method for identifying new class I region genes, which can be applied to other regions of the genome and to other species, and support previous observations that the class I region contains a variety of genes other than those encoding HLA antigens. Received: 10 December 1996 / Revised: 7 January 1997  相似文献   

2.
Continuous genomic sequence has been previously determined for the swine leukocyte antigen (SLA) class I region from the TNF gene cluster at the border between the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class III and class I regions to the UBD gene at the telomeric end of the classical class I gene cluster (SLA-1 to SLA-5, SLA-9, SLA-11). To complete the genomic sequence of the entire SLA class I genomic region, we have analyzed the genomic sequences of two BAC clones carrying a continuous 237,633-bp-long segment spanning from the TRIM15 gene to the UBD gene located on the telomeric side of the classical SLA class I gene cluster. Fifteen non-class I genes, including the zinc finger and the tripartite motif (TRIM) ring-finger-related family genes and olfactory receptor genes, were identified in the 238-kilobase (kb) segment, and their location in the segment was similar to their apparent human homologs. In contrast, a human segment (alpha block) spanning about 375 kb from the gene ETF1P1 and from the HLA-J to HLA-F genes was absent from the 238-kb swine segment. We conclude that the gene organization of the MHC non-class I genes located in the telomeric side of the classical SLA class I gene cluster is remarkably similar between the swine and the human segments, although the swine lacks a 375-kb segment corresponding to the human alpha block. The nucleotide sequence data reported in this paper have been submitted to DDBJ, EMBL, and GenBank databases under accession numbers AB158486 and AB158487  相似文献   

3.
With the use of tissue-specific cDNA probes, several genes, which do not correspond to the class I (B-F), class II (B-L), or class IV (B-G) genes, were detected within the cosmid clusters containing the chicken major histocompatibility genes. We isolated cDNA clones with a probe corresponding to one of them, the 17.5 gene, located between two class I genes. The 17.5.3 cDNA, isolated from a chicken spleen cDNA library, encodes a 257-residue-long protein. This sequence shows significant similarity with several members of the C-type animal lectin superfamily and is probably a type II transmembrane protein. Analysis of several cDNA clones, together with Southern blot experiments, strongly suggest that this gene belongs to a multigene family, with at least some of its members being polymorphic. Several arguments lend support to the possibility that, together with the linked Mhc genes, the 17.5 gene is part of the recently described Rfp-Y system.The nucleotide sequence data reported in this paper have been submitted to the GenBank nucleotide sequence database and have been assigned the accession number M88072.  相似文献   

4.
Sequence and functional analyses were undertaken on two cDNAs and a genomic clone encoding horse major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules. All of the clones were isolated from a single horse that is homozygous for all known horse MHC class I and class II antigens. The two cDNAs (clones 8-9 and 1-29) were isolated from a lymphocyte library and encode polymorphic MHC antigens from two loci. The genomic cosmid clone, isolated from a sperm library, contains the 8-9 gene. All three genes were expressed in mouse L-cells and were recognized by alloantisera and, for the cDNAs, by alloreactive cytotoxic T lymphocytes. A total of 3815 bp of the genomic clone were sequenced, extending from 429 bp upstream (5') of the leader peptide through the 3' untranslated region. Promoter region motifs and an intron-exon structure characteristic of MHC class I genes of other species were found. A subclone containing 407 bp of the promoter region was inserted into a chloramphenicol acetyl transferase reporter plasmid, tested in transient transfection assays, and found to have promoter activity in heterologous cells. This genomic clone will enable detailed studies of MHC class I gene regulation in horse trophoblasts, and in horse retroviral infections.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The genomic sequences of 15 horse major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I genes and a collection of MHC class I homozygous horses of five different haplotypes were used to investigate the genomic structure and polymorphism of the equine MHC. A combination of conserved and locus-specific primers was used to amplify horse MHC class I genes with classical and nonclassical characteristics. Multiple clones from each haplotype identified three to five classical sequences per homozygous animal and two to three nonclassical sequences. Phylogenetic analysis was applied to these sequences, and groups were identified which appear to be allelic series, but some sequences were left ungrouped. Sequences determined from MHC class I heterozygous horses and previously described MHC class I sequences were then added, representing a total of ten horse MHC haplotypes. These results were consistent with those obtained from the MHC homozygous horses alone, and 30 classical sequences were assigned to four previously confirmed loci and three new provisional loci. The nonclassical genes had few alleles and the classical genes had higher levels of allelic polymorphism. Alleles for two classical loci with the expected pattern of polymorphism were found in the majority of haplotypes tested, but alleles at two other commonly detected loci had more variation outside of the hypervariable region than within. Our data indicate that the equine major histocompatibility complex is characterized by variation in the complement of class I genes expressed in different haplotypes in addition to the expected allelic polymorphism within loci.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Clusters of genes encoding mouse transplantation antigens   总被引:80,自引:0,他引:80  
M Steinmetz  A Winoto  K Minard  L Hood 《Cell》1982,28(3):489-498
We constructed a cosmid library from BALB/c mouse sperm DNA and isolated 64 cosmid clones with cDNA probes for transplantation antigens (class I molecules). Of these clones, 54 mapped into 13 gene clusters containing 36 distinct class I genes and encompassing 837 kilobases of DNA. One gene cluster mapped to the L region and a second cluster with seven genes to the Qa-2,3 region of the major histocompatibility complex. Restriction map and Southern blot analyses suggest that there are subgroups of class I genes. Using a 5' flanking sequence of the L gene as a hybridization probe, we show the L gene to be present in mouse strains expressing this antigen but deleted or mutated in strains failing to express it. Our data suggest that gene duplication and deletion presumably by homologous but unequal crossing-over has altered the size and organization of the class I clusters in different mouse strains and probably is an important mechanism for generating polymorphism in these genes. Analysis of the 36 class I genes with cDNA probes specific for the 5' and 3' ends shows that the exon encoding the third external domain is far more conserved than those encoding the first and second external domains of the transplantation antigen. These differences in variability have interesting functional implications.  相似文献   

9.
The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is present at a single chromosomal locus of all jawed vertebrate analyzed so far, from sharks to mammals, except for teleosts whose orthologs of the mammalian MHC-encoded genes are dispersed at several chromosomal loci. Even in teleosts, several class IA genes and those genes directly involved in class I antigen presentation preserve their linkage, defining the teleost MHC class I region. We determined the complete nucleotide sequence of the MHC class I region of the inbred HNI strain of medaka, Oryzias latipes (northern Japan population-derived), from four overlapping bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones spanning 540,982 bp, and compared it with the published sequence of the corresponding region of the inbred Hd-rR strain of medaka (425,935 bp, southern Japan population-derived) as the first extensive study of intraspecies polymorphisms of the ectotherm MHC regions. A segment of about 100 kb in the middle of the compared sequences encompassing two class Ia genes and two immunoproteasome subunit genes, PSMB8 and PSMB10, was so divergent between these two inbred strains that a reliable sequence alignment could not be made. The rest of the compared region (about 320 kb) showed a fair correspondence, and an approximately 96% nucleotide identity was observed upon gap-free segmental alignment. These results indicate that the medaka MHC class I region contains an ∼100-kb polymorphic core, which is most probably evolving adaptively by accumulation of point mutations and extensive genetic rearrangements such as insertions, deletions and duplications. The nucleotide sequence data of HNI MHC class I region reported in this paper have been submitted to the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank and were assigned the accession number AB183488.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The cloning of large genomic fragments corresponding to the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I region provides the necessary framework for a better understanding of its organization and for the localization of new genes involved in MHC-associated disease. Two human genomic libraries constructed in yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) have been prepared using complete Not I or Mlu I digestion of source DNA. From these libraries three YAC clones with inserts belonging to the MHC class I region have been isolated. They correspond to exact copies of three genomic fragments of 210, 145, and 50 kilobases (kb), respectively and have been precisely located in the restriction map of the region. Detailed rare-cutter restriction maps of the inserts have been generated. Within these clones we have demonstrated the presence of two class I genes, one of which is HLA-E, and of at least three Hpa II tiny fragment (HTF) islands, corresponding to three putative new transcribed sequences. End clones, which are of particular interest in the extension and refinement of the regional map, have been rescued by systematic subcloning of purified YACs.  相似文献   

12.
To investigate the class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes expressed in the young sheep thymus, a cDNA library was screened with a human HLA-B7 cDNA probe under conditions of relaxed stringency. Thirteen clones were isolated and found by partial sequences to fall into five classes, requiring the expression of at least three loci. One sequence was found six times, almost half of the total, and may thus represent the major message expressed in the young sheep thymus. One of the clones was found to have failed to excise the intron between cytoplasmic exons 7 and 8, leading to the predicted synthesis of a cytoplasmic domain 23 amino acids longer than the other sheep sequences, and 15 amino acids longer than any cytoplasmic domain previously described. The sequences of all the clones were found to be most similar to bovine, and least similar to mouse class I MHC sequences.The nucleotide sequence data reported in this paper have been sunmitted to the GenBank nucleotide sequence database and have been assigned the accession numbers M 34672-6.  相似文献   

13.
A search for new potential coding sequences was conducted within two overlapping cosmid genomic DNA clusters of about 170 and 45 kb from the swine major histocompatibility complex class III region. The sequences were detected with various probes, including pools of swine cDNA, homologous and heterologous genomic sequences, and synthetic oligonucleotides. The 170 kb cluster was centered on the tumor necrosis factor genes (TNF), and the 45 kb cluster contained the heat-shock protein 70 genes (HSP70). The TNF cluster revealed the presence of five new genes: lymphotoxin , BAT1, BAT2, BAT3, and a sequence related to DNA-binding factors. No sequence homologous to B144 was found in the TNF cluster, although other unidentified coding sequences may be present in this cluster. The HSP70 cluster contained a gene identified as BAT6, that is, tRNA-valyl synthetase. These results provide new evidence that the genomic maps of these various genes in the TNF and HSP70 sub-regions are similar in swine and human.  相似文献   

14.
15.
cDNA surveying is a straightforward approach for identifying sequences in genomic clones expressed in specific tissues. It has been applied to a subchromosomal region of human chromosome 19 (19q13.2-q13.4), a region that contains several known expressed sequences including the locus for myotonic dystrophy (DM). Genomic clones were selected from this region by probing a human placental cosmid library with a chromosome 19q-specific minisatellite sequence, or human genomic clones were isolated from a cosmid library constructed from a human chromosome 19q13.2-q13.3 hamster hybrid cell line using human repetitive DNA as probe. Pooled cDNAs synthesized from RNA of specific tissues characteristically affected in DM were depleted in repetitive sequences and used as hybridization probes against gridded cosmid arrays. DNA from the cDNA-positive cosmid clones was transferred to nylon filters and reprobed with cDNAs to identify restriction fragments that were expressed in these tissues. Hybridizing restriction fragments were subcloned, sequenced, and demonstrated to be nonrepetitive. Primer pairs complementary to subcloned sequences were constructed and used for PCR amplification of cDNA synthesized from RNA of tissues affected in myotonic dystrophy. PCR products were sequenced to verify the identity of expressed genomic DNA and its corresponding cDNA.  相似文献   

16.
The human major histocompatibility complex contains the genes for at least three different types of class II antigens, DR, DC and SB (DR, DQ and DP). They are all composed of an alpha and a beta chain. We have cloned a chromosomal region of 70 kb containing the SB (DP) gene family in overlapping cosmid clones. This segment contains two alpha genes and two beta genes, located in the order SB alpha 1, SB beta 1, SB alpha 2 and SB beta 2. The orientation of the alpha genes is reversed compared with that of the beta genes. This organisation suggests that the SB region has arisen by duplication of a chromosomal segment encompassing one alpha and one beta gene. Partial nucleotide sequences of the SB alpha 1 and SB beta 1 exons demonstrate that the genes correspond to SB alpha and beta cDNA clones. Consequently these genes are expressed. In contrast nucleotide sequence determination of the SB alpha 2 gene shows that it is a pseudogene.  相似文献   

17.
The mouse major histocompatibility complex (MHC) contains many genes in addition to the classical immune response genes. We have screened overlapping cosmid clones covering 170 kb of the H-2K region for genes expressed in embryonal carcinoma (EC) cells. The Ke-3 gene (Abe et al. 1988) found in this region was further studied by Southern, Northern, and sequence analysis. It is an expressed, intron-containing locus encoding a mouse homolog of the bacterial ribosomal protein S13. This is the first nonorganelle S13 homolog identified in metazoans, and its genomic location has been determined precisely.  相似文献   

18.
We are investigating the expression and linkage of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I genes in the duck (Anas platyrhynchos) with a view toward understanding the susceptibility of ducks to two medically important viruses: influenza A and hepatitis B. In mammals, there are multiple MHC class I loci, and alleles at a locus are polymorphic and co-dominantly expressed. In contrast, in lower vertebrates the expression of one locus predominates. Southern-blot analysis and amplification of genomic sequences suggested that ducks have at least four loci encoding MHC class I. To identify expressed MHC genes, we constructed an unamplified cDNA library from the spleen of a single duck and screened for MHC class I. We sequenced 44 positive clones and identified four MHC class I sequences, each sharing approximately 85% nucleotide identity. Allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization to a Northern blot indicated that only two of these sequences were abundantly expressed. In chickens, the dominantly expressed MHC class I gene lies adjacent to the transporter of antigen processing (TAP2) gene. To investigate whether this organization is also found in ducks, we cloned the gene encoding TAP2 from the cDNA library. PCR amplification from genomic DNA allowed us to determine that the dominantly expressed MHC class I gene was adjacent to TAP2. Furthermore, we amplified two alleles of the TAP2 gene from this duck that have significant and clustered amino acid differences that may influence the peptides transported. This organization has implications for the ability of ducks to eliminate viral pathogens.The nucleotide sequence data reported in this paper have been submitted to the GenBank nucleotide sequence database and have been assigned the accession numbers AY294416–22  相似文献   

19.
We have developed a method to identify clones containing recognition sequences for enzymes that cut mammalian genomes infrequently by direct screening of genomic libraries. The degenerate oligonucleotide NNGCGGCCGCNN, in which the internal 8 bases correspond to the recognition sequence of Not I, was used to screen a cosmid library, and it led to a greater than 10-fold enrichment in the number of clones containing Not I sites. This technique permits the efficient identification of sufficient clones from a chromosome-specific library to allow the construction of a complete pulsed-field map of that chromosome and to assist in finding genes in genomic DNA.  相似文献   

20.
In terms of number of species, perciform (perch-like) fishes are one of the most diversified groups of modern vertebrates. Within this group, the family Cichlidae is best known for its spectacular adaptive radiation in the great lakes of East Africa. The molecular tool kit used in the study of this radiation includes the major histocompatibility complex (Mhc) genes. To refine this tool, information about the organization of the Mhc regions is badly needed. In this study, the first step was taken toward providing such information for the Mhc class one regions of Oreochromis niloticus, a representative species of the tilapiine branch of the Cichlidae, for which good bacterial artificial chromosome library is available. Screening of the library with class I gene probes led to the identification and isolation of 31 class-I-positive clones. Sequencing of one of these clones and partial characterization of the remaining clones for the presence of class I exons resulted in the construction of two contigs representing the class I region of this species as well as identification of seven additional class-I-positive singleton clones. The O. niloticus genome was shown to contain at least 28 class I genes or gene fragments. The shorter of the two contigs was approximately 330 kb long and contained eight class I genes/gene fragments; the longer contig encompassed 1,200 kb of sequence and contained minimally 17 class I genes/gene fragments; three additional class I genes were found to be borne by a clone that might be part of the shorter contig. Electronic supplementary material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at and is accessible for authorized users. This work had been carried out in part at the Max-Planck-Institut für Biologie, Abteilung Immungenetik, Tübingen, Germany (A.S., R.D., N.T., S.S., and J.K.). The sequences reported in this paper have been deposited in the GenBank database (accession nos. AB270803–AB270897).  相似文献   

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