Abstract

Major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II) molecules are of central importance for adaptive immunity. Defective MHC-II expression causes a severe immunodeficiency disease called bare lymphocyte syndrome (BLS). Studies of the molecular defects underlying BLS have been pivotal for characterization of the regulatory system controlling the transcription of MHC-II genes. The precisely controlled pattern of MHC-II gene expression is achieved by a very peculiar and highly specialized molecular machinery that involves the interplay between ubiquitous DNA-binding transcription factors and a highly unusual, tightly regulated, non-DNA-binding coactivator called the MHC class II transactivator (CIITA). CIITA single handedly coordinates practically all aspects of MHC-II gene regulation and has therefore been dubbed the master controller of MHC-II expression. Several of the unusual features of the MHC-II regulatory system may be a consequence of the fact that CIITA originated from an ancient family of cytoplasmic proteins involved in inflammation and innate immunity. The function of CIITA in transcriptional regulation of MHC-II genes could thus be a recent acquisition by an ancestral protein having a role in an unrelated system.

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