The tiny marine invertebrate’s genes shed new light on the immune system.
According to a recent study done by experts at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, the way a tiny marine invertebrate differentiates its own cells from competitors has striking similarities to the human immune system.
The research, which was recently published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests that the building blocks of our immune system evolved much earlier than previously believed. This new information may help us better understand transplant rejection and, potentially help develop new immunotherapies.
“For decades, researchers have wondered whether self-recognition in a marine creature called Hydractinia symbiolongicarpus was akin to the processes that control whether a piece of skin can be successfully grafted from one person to another,” said senior author Matthew Nictora, Ph.D., assistant professor of surgery and immunology at the Thomas E. Starzl Transplantation Institute.
“Our study shows for the first time that a special group of proteins called the immunoglobulin superfamily— which are important for adaptive immunity in mammals and other vertebrates — are found in such a distantly- related animal.”
When incompatible Hydractinia symbiolongicarpus colonies identify each other as non-self via Alr genes, they fight. As a result, the colony on the left started to grow over the colony on the right. Credit: Huene, A. L. et al., Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2022
Sea anemones, corals, and jellyfish are all members of the same group as Hydractinia symbiolongicarpus. The animals, which have tube-like bodies and tentacles for catching prey, resemble miniature versions of wacky inflatable tube men dancing outside a car dealership. They grow in colonies and cover hermit crab shells like moss on a rock.
“As colonies grow and compete for space on crab shells, they often bump into each other,” explained Nicotra, who is also associate director of the Center for Evolutionary Biology and Medicine in Pitt’s School of Medicine. “If two colonies recognize each other as self, they fuse together. But if they identify each other as non-self, the colonies fight by releasing harpoon-like structures from special cells.”
Matthew Nictora, Ph.D., assistant professor of surgery and immunology at the University of Pittsburgh Thomas E. Starzl Transplantation Institute and associate director of the Center for Evolutionary Biology and Medicine. Credit: Matthew Nicotra
Nicotra and his colleagues had previously identified two genes, Alr1 and Alr2, that were involved in Hydractinia’s fuse-or-fight system, but they hypothesized that there was more to the story.
“If you imagine that the genome of the animal is spread out in front of us, we had a flashlight on these two little points, but we didn’t know what else was there,” said Nicotra. “Now we’ve been able to sequence the whole genome and illuminate the whole region around these genes. It turns out that Alr1 and Alr2 are part of a huge family of genes.”
In the new study, the researchers identified and sequenced 41 Alr genes, which form a complex that likely controls self- versus non-self-recognition in Hydractinia.
Next, the team wanted to see how the proteins that Alr genes encode compared to those found in vertebrates. Until recently, it was nearly impossible to accurately predict the 3D structure of proteins based on a gene’s sequence, but in 2021, the release of a tool called AlphaFold changed that.
When compatible Hydractinia symbiolongicarpus colonies recognize each other as “self,” via Alr genes, they fuse together. Credit: Huene, A. L. et al., Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2022
Using this tool, the researchers compared the structure of Alr proteins to immunoglobulin superfamily (IgSF) proteins, an important group that includes antibodies and receptors on B and T cells of the immune system. IgSF proteins have three characteristic regions, or domains, including the V-set domain.
“The ‘V’ stands for variable,” said Nicotra. “When a B or T cell becomes specialized to fight a particular pathogen, V-set domains are rearranged to make a variable sequence, which the immune system uses to recognize specific pathogens or cells.”
Nicotra was surprised to find that the domains in Alr proteins had 3D structures remarkably similar to V-set domains, even though they lacked telltale features usually found in IgSF proteins.
“Unmistakably, these are V-set domains,” he explained. “They’re just very, very strange.”
Until now, it was thought that V-set domains had arisen in the branch of the animal kingdom known as Bilateria. This group originated about 540 million years ago and includes most familiar animals, including mammals, insects, fish, mollusks and all others with right and left sides.
The finding of V-set domains in Hydractinia — which is part of a group that appeared earlier in the evolution of animals — suggests that V-set domains arose further back in the evolutionary tree than previously thought.
Several Alr proteins also had signatures associated with immune signaling in other animals, another clue that this protein complex is involved in self-recognition.
“We know lots about the immune systems of mammals and other vertebrates, but we’ve only scratched the surface of immunity in invertebrates,” said Nicotra. “We think that a better understanding of immune signaling in organisms like Hydractinia could ultimately point to alternative ways to manipulate those signaling pathways in patients with transplanted organs.”
- aum and Karlston
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