Abstract

The B cell receptor (BCR) is a multiprotein complex that is pivotal to antigen recognition and signal transduction in B cells. It consists of an antigen binding component, membrane Ig (mIg), non-covalently associated with the signaling component, a disulphide-linked heterodimer of CD79a and CD79b. In this study, the gene and corresponding cDNA for CD79a and CD79b in the gray short-tailed opossum, as well as the cDNA sequences for CD79a and CD79b in the tammar wallaby, are described. Many of the structural and functional features of CD79a and CD79b were conserved in both marsupials, including the ITAM regulatory motif in the cytoplasmic tails of both subunits. The marsupial CD79 sequences shared a high degree of amino acid identities of 76% (CD79a) and 72% (CD79b) to each other, as well as 60–61% (CD79a) and 58–59% (CD79b) with their eutherian counterparts. RT-PCR analysis of CD79a and CD79b transcripts in the immune tissues of tammar pouch young revealed CD79a transcripts in the bone marrow, cervical thymus and spleen at day 10 postpartum. CD79b transcripts were detected in the bone marrow and cervical thymus at day 10 but were not detected in the spleen until day 21 postpartum. These results suggest that a functional BCR may not be assembled until day 21 postpartum and the tammar neonate may not be capable of mounting an effective adaptive immune response until this time. The molecular information presented here will allow further investigation of the role of the CD79 subunits in marsupial B cell signaling, especially during ontogeny and disease.

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