Shopping cart ITEMS
 modern scholarly publishers in the finest tradition
Login Register
Home
Books
Journals
References
A-Z Index
Author Index
For Our Authors
User Area
Shopping Cart
Contact
Electronic Data Center

Critical Reviews™ in Immunology

 

ISSN for PRINT: 1040-8401

Institutional price:

$831.00

Issues per year:

6

For Online Access

Best Paper Award Selection - Editorial Board Site

Add subscription to shopping cart

2003, Volume23

Issue 5&6

  159 pages  

DOI: 10.1615/CritRevImmunol.v23.i56   

click 'Save as...' here to save XML metadata

Issue price - $264.00  

Add to shopping cart

  • Major Histocompatibility Lineages and Immune Gene Function in Teleost Fishes: The Road Not Taken
  • Rene J. M. Stet
    Cell Biology and Immunology Group, Wageningen Institute of Animal Sciences, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands

    Corine P. Kruiswijk
    Cell Biology and Immunology Group, Wageningen Institute of Animal Sciences, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands

    Brian Dixon
    Department of Biology, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada


    ABSTRACT

    It has become increasingly clear over the course of the past decade that the immune system genes of teleosts and tetrapods are plainly derived from common ancestral genes. The last 5 years, however, have also made it abundantly clear that in the teleost genome some of these genes are organized in a manner very different from that seen in mammals. These differences are probably the result of differences in life history traits, such as fecundancy, within each group of species when faced with an evolutionary fork in the road shortly after their divergence from each other. One group, the tetrapods, including mammals, chose a highly organized linked major histocompatibility complex, while in teleosts the major histocompatibility genes remained unlinked. In this review we will discuss the structural and functional implications of this different organization, particularly for major histocompatibility genes, but drawing on the current knowledge of some other genes for further support for the hypothesis that each group took a different road, one more traveled and one less taken.

    DOI: 10.1615/CritRevImmunol.v23.i56.50

    Download article, 32 pages

    Article price - $40.00  

    Add to shopping cart

    << Previous article   Next article >>

    Designed by offsiteteam Designed by offsiteteam Designed by offsiteteam
    Begell House Inc.
    50 Cross Highway,
    Redding, CT 06896
    TEL (203) 938 1300
    FAX (203) 938 1304
    orders@begellhouse.com