PHYLOGENETICALLY ASSOCIATED RESIDUES WITHIN THE VHIII SUBGROUP OF SEVERAL MAMMALIAN SPECIES

Author:

Capra J. Donald1,Wasserman Richard L.1,Kehoe J. Michael1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Microbiology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine of the City University of New York, New York 10029

Abstract

Immunoglobulin heavy chains from IgG pools of several mammalian species have been subjected to Edman degradation on an automated protein sequencer. The percentage of unblocked vs. blocked heavy chains was estimated from the yield of the invariant valine in the second position. Further analysis of these unblocked polypeptides unequivocally placed them in the VHIII subgroup on the basis of homology with known human heavy chain sequences. The mammals studied could be divided into three distinct categories on the basis of the distribution of the VHIII subgroup. In several species the VHIII subgroup could not be detected while, in others, virtually all of the heavy chains belonged to this subgroup. Several species had intermediate amounts with the level of the VHIII subgroup restricted to between 19 and 29% of the total pool. Within experimental error, all members of a given order had a similar VHIII subgroup distribution. Further amino acid sequence studies illustrated a high degree of structural homogeneity in the heavy chains of IgG isolated from pooled sera of a number of mammalian species. The very close amino acid sequence homologies of the amino terminal 24 residues of the various pools corroborated conclusions previously obtained using several myeloma proteins from some of these same species. In particular, certain phylogenetically associated residues were identifiable at characteristic positions in the pools in confirmation of their identification in the myeloma proteins. The simplest assumptions would suggest that these findings are more compatible with a pauci-gene than a multi-gene basis for the generation of antibody diversity.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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