FCGR Genetic Variation in Two Populations From Ecuador Highlands—Extensive Copy-Number Variation, Distinctive Distribution of Functional Polymorphisms, and a Novel, Locally Common, Chimeric FCGR3B/A (CD16B/A) Gene

4Citations
Citations of this article
17Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Fcγ receptors (FcγR), cell-surface glycoproteins that bind antigen-IgG complexes, control both humoral and cellular immune responses. The FCGR locus on chromosome 1q23.3 comprises five homologous genes encoding low-affinity FcγRII and FcγRIII, and displays functionally relevant polymorphism that impacts on human health. Recurrent events of non-allelic homologous recombination across the FCGR locus result in copy-number variation of ~82.5 kbp-long fragments known as copy-number regions (CNR). Here, we characterize a recently described deletion that we name CNR5, which results in loss of FCGR3A, FCGR3B, and FCGR2C, and generation of a recombinant FCGR3B/A gene. We show that the CNR5 recombination spot lies at the beginning of the third FCGR3 intron. Although the FCGR3B/A-encoded hybrid protein CD16B/A reaches the plasma membrane in transfected cells, its possible natural expression, predictably restricted to neutrophils, could not be demonstrated in resting or interferon γ-stimulated cells. As the CNR5-deletion was originally described in an Ecuadorian family from Llano Grande (an indigenous community in North-Eastern Quito), we characterized the FCGR genetic variation in two populations from the highlands of Ecuador. Our results reveal that CNR5-deletion is relatively frequent in Llano Grande (5 carriers out of 36 donors). Furthermore, we found a high frequency of two strong-phagocytosis variants: the FCGR3B-NA1 haplotype and the CNR1 duplication, which translates into an increased FCGR3B and FCGR2C copy-number. CNR1 duplication was particularly increased in Llano Grande, 77.8% of the studied sample carrying at least one such duplication. In contrast, an extended haplotype CD16A-176V – CD32C-ORF+2B.2 – CD32B-2B.4 including strong activating and inhibitory FcγR variants was absent in Llano Grande and found at a low frequency (8.6%) in Ecuador highlands. This particular distribution of FCGR polymorphism, possibly a result of selective pressures, further confirms the importance of a comprehensive, joint analysis of all genetic variations in the locus and warrants additional studies on their putative clinical impact. In conclusion, our study confirms important ethnic variation at the FCGR locus; it shows a distinctive FCGR polymorphism distribution in Ecuador highlands; provides a molecular characterization of a novel CNR5-deletion associated with CD16A and CD16B deficiency; and confirms its presence in that population.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Moraru, M., Perez-Portilla, A., Al-Akioui Sanz, K., Blazquez-Moreno, A., Arnaiz-Villena, A., Reyburn, H. T., & Vilches, C. (2021). FCGR Genetic Variation in Two Populations From Ecuador Highlands—Extensive Copy-Number Variation, Distinctive Distribution of Functional Polymorphisms, and a Novel, Locally Common, Chimeric FCGR3B/A (CD16B/A) Gene. Frontiers in Immunology, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.615645

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free