Discovery of an ancient MHC category with both class I and class II features

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Abstract

Two classes of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules, MHC class I and class II, play important roles in our immune system, presenting antigens to functionally distinct T lymphocyte populations. However, the origin of this essential MHC class divergence is poorly understood. Here, we discovered a category of MHC molecules (W-category) in the most primitive jawed vertebrates, cartilaginous fish, and also in bony fish and tetrapods. W-category, surprisingly, possesses class II–type α- and β-chain organization together with class I–specific sequence motifs for interdomain binding, and the W-category α2 domain shows unprecedented, phylogenetic similarity with β2-microglobulin of class I. Based on the results, we propose a model in which the ancestral MHC class I molecule evolved from class II–type W-category. The discovery of the ancient MHC group, W-category, sheds a light on the long-standing critical question of the MHC class divergence and suggests that class II type came first.

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Okamura, K., Dijkstra, J. M., Tsukamoto, K., Grimholt, U., Wiegertjes, G. F., Kondow, A., … Hashimoto, K. (2021). Discovery of an ancient MHC category with both class I and class II features. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 118(51). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2108104118

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