Allorecognition in colonial tunicates: protection against predatory cell lineages?
- 1 February 1999
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Immunological Reviews
- Vol. 167 (1) , 69-79
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-065x.1999.tb01383.x
Abstract
The MHC molecules have been historically perceived as transplantation antigens, though it is now recognized that their primary, if not sole, role is in eliminating parasites and in surveillance and clearance of aberrant self. Indeed, pregnancy in mammals would represent the closest to a natural transplantation process that occurs in vertebrates. However, among the immediate ancestors to the vertebrates, natural intraspecific allorecognition processes are common. Among members of the colonial tunicate Botryllus schlosseri, two individuals that share a single allele of the highly polymorphic fusibility/histocompatibility (Fu/HC) locus are able to fuse with one another. Could this Fu/HC be related to the MHC such that the MHC really did have its origins as a transplantation antigen? Presently we review the genetics and biology of natural transplantation processes in colonial tunicates, comparing it with allorecognition as mediated through the vertebrate T-cell receptor, killer cell inhibitory receptor/Ly49, and MHC. Experimental approaches to determining if the molecules regulating allorecognition in tunicates have any ancestral relationship to the vertebrate MHC are discussed, as is a genomic approach to isolating novel mediators of allorecognition. We also explore the biological basis for allorecognition in colonial tunicates and recent work that highlights the costs of not maintaining a system for allorecognition.Keywords
This publication has 69 references indexed in Scilit:
- Somatic and germ cell parasitism in a colonial ascidian: Possible role for a highly polymorphic allorecognition systemProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- AFLP: a new technique for DNA fingerprintingNucleic Acids Research, 1995
- cDNA Cloning of a Putative Protochoradate FK506-Binding ProteinBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1993
- Interpopulational allogeneic reactions in the colonial protochordate Botryllus schlosseriInternational Immunology, 1991
- Identification of markers linked to disease-resistance genes by bulked segregant analysis: a rapid method to detect markers in specific genomic regions by using segregating populations.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1991
- GROWTH AND SEXUAL MATURATION OF LABORATORY-CULTURED MONTEREYBOTRYLLUS SCHLOSSERIThe Biological Bulletin, 1986
- Separation and labeling of specific subpopulations of Botryllus blood cellsJournal of Experimental Zoology, 1984
- Protochordate allorecognition is controlled by a MHC-like gene systemNature, 1982
- Studies on colony specificity in the compound ascidian, Botryllus primigenus oka. II. In vivo bioassay for analyzing the mechanism of “nonfusion” reactionDevelopmental & Comparative Immunology, 1982
- The use of skin grafting to distinguish between monozygotic and dizygotic twins in cattleHeredity, 1951