“…Genetic analysis has revealed that the xMHC, which is still rapidly evolving, arose through block duplications of simpler ancestral patterns, followed by diversification, leading to five subregions, the extended class I, classical class I, classical class III, classical class II, and extended class II. 22,23 We have seen how HERV recombination may create this pattern of block duplications, and, as Dawkins and colleagues demonstrate, the human MHC is densely colonized by HERVs and retroelements, which are likely to have played an important part in its evolution. 24 Villarreal has probed the evolution of adaptive immunity, and the origin of self, to propose a comprehensive hypothesis in which viruses in general, and retroviruses in particular, have played a key role in the evolution of immunity and the recognition of self from the simpler non-adaptive systems of marine invertebrates, to the sudden, almost explosive, origins of true adaptive immunity in jawed fish, with its subsequent refinements, each accompanied by new expansions of retroviruses, with the origins of mammals, and, finally, primates.…”