4.3 Article

A VpreB3 homologue in a marsupial, the gray short-tailed opossum, Monodelphis domestica

Journal

IMMUNOGENETICS
Volume 64, Issue 8, Pages 647-652

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00251-012-0626-0

Keywords

VpreB; Evolution; Marsupial; B cell ontogeny

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health from the Institutional Development Award program and National Science Foundation award [IP20RR18754, IOS-0641382]

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A VpreB surrogate light (SL) chain was identified for the first time in a marsupial, the opossum Monodelphis domestica. Comparing the opossum VpreB to homologues from eutherian (placental mammals) and avian species supported the marsupial gene being VpreB3. VpreB3 is a protein that is not known to traffic to the cell surface as part of the pre-B cell receptor. Rather, VpreB3 associates with nascent immunoglobulin chains in the endoplasmic reticulum. Homologues of other known SL chains VpreB1, VpreB2, and lambda 5, which are found in eutherian mammals, were not found in the opossum genome, nor have they been identified in the genomes of nonmammals. VpreB3 likely evolved from earlier gene duplication, independent of that which generated VpreB1 and VpreB2 in eutherians. The apparent absence of VpreB1, VpreB2, and lambda 5 in marsupials suggests that an extracellular pre-B cell receptor containing SL chains, as it has been defined in humans and mice, may be unique to eutherian mammals. In contrast, the conservation of VpreB3 in marsupials and its presence in nonmammals is consistent with previous hypotheses that it is playing a more primordial role in B cell development.

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