Identification of a mouse male-specific transplantation antigen, H-Y
- PMID: 7544442
- DOI: 10.1038/376695a0
Identification of a mouse male-specific transplantation antigen, H-Y
Abstract
The male-specific transplantation antigen, H-Y, causes rejection of male tissue grafts by genotypically identical female mice and contributes to the rejection of human leukocyte antigen-matched male organ grafts by human females. Although first recognized 40 years ago, the identity of H-Y has remained elusive. T cells detect several distinct H-Y epitopes, and these are probably peptides, derived from intracellular proteins, that are presented at the cell surface with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules. In the mouse, the gene(s) controlling H-Y expression (Hya) are located on the short arm of the Y chromosome between the zinc-finger genes Zfy-1 and Zfy-2. We have recently identified Smcy, a ubiquitously expressed gene, in this region and its X-chromosome homologue, Smcx. Here we report that Smcy encodes an H-YKk epitope that is defined by the octamer peptide TENSGKDI: no similar peptide is found in Smcx. These findings provide a genetic basis for the antigenic difference between males and females that contributes towards a tissue transplant rejection response.
Comment in
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Immunogenetics. Female anti-male attack.Nature. 1995 Aug 24;376(6542):642. doi: 10.1038/376642a0. Nature. 1995. PMID: 7651511 No abstract available.
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