A Bony Fish Immunological Receptor of the Nitr Multigene Family Mediates Allogeneic Recognition Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Novel immune-type receptors (NITRs) comprise an exceptionally large, diversified family of activating and inhibitory receptors that has been identified in bony fish. Here, we characterized the structure of an activating NITR that is expressed by a cytotoxic natural killer (NK)-like cell line and that specifically binds an allogeneic B cell target. A single amino acid residue within the NITR immunoglobulin variable (V)-type domain accounts for specificity of the interaction. Structures solved by X-ray crystallography revealed that the V-type domains of NITRs form homodimers resembling rearranging antigen-binding receptor heterodimers. CDR1 elements of both subunits of NITR dimers form ligand-binding surfaces that determine specificity for the nonself target. In the evolution of immune function, it appears that a specific NK type of innate recognition may be mediated by a complex germline multigene family of V structures resembling those that are somatically diversified in adaptive immunological responses.

publication date

  • 2008-08-01

NIH Manuscript Submission System ID

  • NIHMS66165

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC2603606

Web of Science ID

  • 000258610800011

grantCited

  • R01 AI023338
  • R01 AI023338-24
  • R01 AI057559
  • R01 AI057559-04
  • R01 AI23338
  • R01 AI57559
  • R01 DE013883
  • R21 HL080222

PubMed ID

  • 18674935

start page

  • 228

end page

  • 237

volume

  • 29