4.3 Article

Parallel evolution of a self-signal: humans and new world monkeys independently lost the cell surface sugar Neu5Gc

期刊

IMMUNOGENETICS
卷 66, 期 11, 页码 671-674

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00251-014-0795-0

关键词

Convergent evolution; Self-recognition; Innate immunity; Glycobiology; Sialic acids; Platyrrhines

资金

  1. G. Harold and Leila Y. Mathers Charitable Foundation [CSD081]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R01 1065732, R01 GM32373]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Human sialic acid biology is unusual and thought to be unique among mammals. Humans lack a functional cytidine monophosphate-N-acetylneuraminic acid hydroxylase (CMAH) protein and cannot synthesize the sugar Neu5Gc, an innate mammalian signal of self. Losing this sugar changed how humans interact with some of our deadliest pathogens: malaria, influenza, and streptococcus among others. We show that the New World monkeys, comprising the third of all primate species, have human-like sialic acid biology. They have lost Neu5Gc because of an independent CMAH inactivation similar to 30 million years ago (mya) (compared to similar to 3 mya in hominids). This parallel loss of Neu5Gc opens sialic acid biology to comparative phylogenetic analysis and reveals an unexpected conservation priority. New World monkeys risk infection by human pathogens that can recognize cells in the absence of Neu5Gc. This striking molecular convergence provides a mechanism that could explain the long-standing observation that New World monkeys are susceptible to some human diseases that cannot be transmitted to other primates.

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