Abstract

cDNA clones encoding the bovine major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II DQα chain were isolated. One clone, MQ9, encoded a primary translated product of 255 amino acids, with a signal peptide of 23 amino acids and a mature polypeptide of 232 amino acids. A new A2 gene in the DQ subregion of the bovine genome was identified from a comparison of amino acid sequences encoded by class II A genes among several species and the construction of a phylogenetic tree. It was revealed that MQ9 is most closely related to the ovine DQA2 genes among sequences from various mammalian species. By contrast, the BoLA-DQA genes previously isolated are more closely related to ovine DQA1 than to the BoLA-DQA2 gene, and they represent BoLA-DQA1 genes. Thus, the presence of two BoLA A genes, which may be expressed and functional in the bovine, as well as in sheep was confirmed. A large number of amino acids unique to products of DQA2 genes of bovine and ovine origin were identified when the predicted amino acid sequences for both species were compared, and most of the DQA2-specific residues were located in the α1 domain and were conserved with respect to products of DQA1 genes of ruminants. Thus, several characteristics of the bovine DQA genes were found to differ from those of human and rodent genes, despite similarities in gene structure and in nucleotide sequence.

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