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Structural analysis of the RH-like blood group gene products in nonhuman primates

Journal Article · · Immunogenetics
 [1]; ;  [2];  [3]; ; ; ;  [4]; ;  [5]
  1. Centre Regional de Transfusion Sanguine, Toulouse (France)
  2. Universitaire d`Immunogenetique moleculaire, Toulouse (France)
  3. University Medical Center, New York, NY (United States)
  4. Institut National de la Transfusion Sanguine, Paris (France)
  5. College de France, Paris (France)

Rh-related transcripts present in bone marrow samples from several species of nonhuman primates (chimpanzee, gorilla, gibbon, crab-eating macaque) have been amplified by RT-polymerase chain reaction using primers deduced from the sequence of human RH genes. Nucleotide sequence analysis of the nonhuman transcripts revealed a high degree of similarity to human blood group Rh sequences, suggesting a great conservation of the RH genes throughout evolution. Full-length transcripts, potentially encoding 417 amino acid long proteins homologous to Rh polypeptides, were characterized, as well as mRNA isoforms which harbored nucleotide deletions or insertions and potentially encode truncated proteins. Proteins of 30-40,000 M{sub r}, immunologically related to human Rh proteins, were detected by western blot analysis with antipeptide antibodies, indicating that Rh-like transcripts are translated into membrane proteins. Comparison of human and nonhuman protein sequences was pivotal in clarifying the molecular basis of the blood group C/c polymorphism, showing that only the Pro103Ser substitution was correlated with C/c polymorphism. In addition, it was shown that a proline residue at position 102 was critical in the expression of C and c epitopes, most likely by providing an appropriate conformation of Rh polypeptides. From these data a phylogenetic reconstruction of the RH locus evolution has been calculated from which an unrooted phylogenetic tree could be proposed, indicating that African ape Rh-like genes would be closer to the human RhD gene than to the human RhCE gene. 55 refs., 4 figs., 1 tab.

Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
OSTI ID:
75562
Journal Information:
Immunogenetics, Journal Name: Immunogenetics Journal Issue: 5 Vol. 41; ISSN 0093-7711; ISSN IMNGBK
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

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