Evolution of MDA-5/RIG-I-dependent innate immunity: independent evolution by domain grafting
- PMID: 18971330
- PMCID: PMC2579374
- DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0804956105
Evolution of MDA-5/RIG-I-dependent innate immunity: independent evolution by domain grafting
Abstract
Type I Interferons (IFNs) are requisite components in antiviral innate immunity. Classically, a Toll-like receptor-dependent pathway induces type I interferons. However, recent recognition of melanoma differentiation associated gene-5 (MDA-5) and retinoic acid inducible gene-I (RIG-I) as primary sensors of RNA viruses for type I interferon induction highlights a potentially unique pathway for innate immunity. Our present investigation tracing the phylogenetic origin of MDA-5 and RIG-I domain arrangement (CARD1-CARD2-helicase-DEAD/DEAH) indicates that these proteins originated specifically in mammals, firmly linking this family of proteins with interferons in a highly derived evolutionary development of innate immunity. MDA-5, but not RIG-I, orthologs are found in fish, indicating that MDA-5 might have evolved before RIG-I. Our analyses also reveal that the MDA-5 and RIG-I domain arrangement evolved independently by domain grafting and not by a simple gene-duplication event of the entire four-domain arrangement, which may have been initiated by differential sensitivity of these proteins to viral infection.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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