Limited MHC class II gene polymorphism in the West African chimpanzee is distributed maximally by haplotype diversity
Publication date
2019-08-29
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taverne
Abstract
Chimpanzees have been used for some time as an animal model in research on immune-related diseases in humans. The major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region of the chimpanzee has also been the subject of studies in which the attention was mainly on the class I genes. Although full-length sequence information is available on the DRB region genes, such detailed information is lacking for the other class II genes and, if present, is based mainly on exon 2 sequences. In the present study, full-length sequencing was performed on DQ, DP, and DRA genes in a cohort of 67 pedigreed animals, thereby allowing a thorough analysis of the MHC class II repertoire. The results demonstrate that the number of MHC class II lineages and alleles is relatively low, whereas haplotype diversity (combination of genes/alleles on a chromosome) seems to have been maximised by crossing-over processes.
Keywords
Chimpanzee, MHC, Nonhuman primates, Taverne, Immunology, Genetics
Citation
Otting, N, de Groot, N G & Bontrop, R E 2019, 'Limited MHC class II gene polymorphism in the West African chimpanzee is distributed maximally by haplotype diversity', Immunogenetics, vol. 71, no. 1, pp. 13-23. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00251-018-1080-4