The HLA-G gene displays several peculiarities that are distinct from those of classical HLA class I genes. The unique structure of the HLA-G molecule permits a restricted peptide presentation and allows the modulation of the cells of the immune system. Although polymorphic sites may potentially influence all biological functions of HLA-G, those present at the promoter and 3′ untranslated regions have been particularly studied in experimental and pathological conditions. The relatively low polymorphism observed in the MHC-G coding region both in humans and apes may represent a strong selective pressure for invariance, whereas, in regulatory regions several lines of evidence support the role of balancing selection. Since HLA-G has immunomodulatory properties, the understanding of gene regulation and the role of polymorphic sites on gene function may permit an individualized approach for the future use of HLA-G for therapeutic purposes.
The HLA-G gene is predominantly expressed at the maternal-fetal interface. It has been associated with maternal-fetal tolerance and in the inhibition of cytotoxic T lymphocyte and natural killer cytolytic functions. At least two variations in the 3'untranslated region (UTR) of HLA-G locus are associated with HLA-G expression levels, the 14-bp deletion/insertion polymorphism and the +3142 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP). However, this region has not been completely characterized yet. The variability of the 3'UTR of HLA-G gene and its haplotype structure were characterized in 155 individuals from Brazil, as well as HLA-G alleles associated with each of the 3'UTR haplotype. The following eight variation sites were detected: the 14-bp polymorphism and SNPs at the positions +3003T/C, +3010C/G, +3027A/C, +3035C/T, +3142G/C, +3187A/G and +3196C/G. Similarly, 11 different 3'UTR haplotypes were identified and several HLA-G alleles presented only one 3'UTR haplotype. In addition, a high linkage disequilibrium among the variation sites was detected, especially among the 14-bp insertion and the alleles +3142G and +3187A, all previously associated with low mRNA availability, demonstrating that their effects are not independent. The detailed analyses of 3'UTR of the HLA-G locus may shed some light into mechanisms underlying the regulation of HLA-G expression.
HLA-G molecule plays an important role on immune response regulation and has been implicated on the inhibition of T and natural killer cell cytolytic function and inhibition of allogeneic T-cell proliferation. Due to its immune-modulator properties, the HLA-G gene expression has been associated with the outcome of allograft and of autoimmune, infectious, and malignant disorders. Several lines of evidence indicate that HLA-G polymorphisms at the 5'-upstream regulatory region (5' URR) and 3'-untranslated region (3' UTR) may influence the HLA-G expression levels. Because Brazilians represent one of the most heterogeneous populations in the world with the widest HLA-G coding region variability already detected among the studied populations, a high level of variability and haplotype diversity would be expected in Brazilians. On this basis, the 5' URR, coding, and 3' UTR variability were evaluated in a Brazilian series consisting of 100 healthy bone marrow donors, as well as the linkage disequilibrium pattern along the gene and the extended haplotypes encompassing several gene segment variations. The HLA-G locus seems to present six different HLA-G lineages showing functional variations mainly in nucleotides of the regulatory regions. Differences were observed at the 5' URR in positions that either coincide with or are close to transcription factor-binding sites and at the 3' UTR mainly in positions that have already been reported to influence HLA-G mRNA availability. We report several lines of evidence for balancing selection acting on the regulatory regions, which may indicate that these HLA-G lineages may be related to the differential HLA-G expression profiles.
HLA-G molecule has well-recognized tolerogenic properties, and the encoding gene shows lower frequency of polymorphism at the coding region but higher variability at regulatory 5’ and 3’ untranslated (3’UTR) regions. At least three 3’UTR polymorphic sites have been associated with HLA-G mRNA regulation, including the 14 base pair (14bp) Insertion/Deletion, +3142C-G and +3187A-G. We studied the association of polymorphic sites at 3’UTR (sequencing analysis, encompassing the 14bp Ins-Del/+3003T-C/+3010C-G/+3027C-A/+3035C-T/+3142C-G/+3187A-G/+3196C-G polymorphic sites) with plasma soluble HLA-G levels (sHLA-G, detected by ELISA) in 187 French and 153 Brazilian healthy individuals. Allele and genotype frequencies were closely similar in both populations; however, Brazilians showed a higher HLA-G 3’UTR haplotype diversity. Considering sHLA-G levels in both populations altogether, individuals presenting 14bp Del/Del showed higher levels compared to 14bpIns/Ins genotype (P <0.05); those presenting +3010C/G showed higher levels compared to the +3010C-C genotype (P< 0.05); those presenting +3027C-C showed higher levels than the +3027A-A genotype (P< 0.05); and those bearing +3035C-C showed higher levels compared to the +3035C-T (P < 0.01) and +3035T-T (P < 0.05) genotypes. The analyses of 3’UTR haplotypes showed that UTR-1 (DelTGCCCGC) was associated with higher expression of sHLA-G, whereas UTR-5 (InsTCCTGAC) and UTR-7 (InsTCATGAC) with lower expression and other UTRs (UTR-2/3/4/6) exhibited intermediate levels. Since the differential expression of HLA-G may be beneficial or harmful depending on the underlying condition, the identification of individuals genetically programmed to differentially express HLA-G may help on defining novel strategies to control the immune response against the underlying disorder.
Human leukocyte antigen G (HLA-G) belongs to the family of non-classical HLA class I genes, located within the major histocompatibility complex (MHC). HLA-G has been the target of most recent research regarding the function of class I non-classical genes. The main features that distinguish HLA-G from classical class I genes are (a) limited protein variability, (b) alternative splicing generating several membrane bound and soluble isoforms, (c) short cytoplasmic tail, (d) modulation of immune response (immune tolerance), and (e) restricted expression to certain tissues. In the present work, we describe the HLA-G gene structure and address the HLA-G variability and haplotype diversity among several populations around the world, considering each of its major segments [promoter, coding, and 3′ untranslated region (UTR)]. For this purpose, we developed a pipeline to reevaluate the 1000Genomes data and recover miscalled or missing genotypes and haplotypes. It became clear that the overall structure of the HLA-G molecule has been maintained during the evolutionary process and that most of the variation sites found in the HLA-G coding region are either coding synonymous or intronic mutations. In addition, only a few frequent and divergent extended haplotypes are found when the promoter, coding, and 3′UTRs are evaluated together. The divergence is particularly evident for the regulatory regions. The population comparisons confirmed that most of the HLA-G variability has originated before human dispersion from Africa and that the allele and haplotype frequencies have probably been shaped by strong selective pressures.
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