“…But other macaque species, such as the cynomolgus macaque (≈ 3,000 individuals) and southern pigtailed macaques ( Macaca nemestrina, Mane ) (≈ 500 individuals), have also been investigated thoroughly, and more than 2,400 and 800 alleles belonging to 33 and 25 genes, respectively, have been assigned. When focussing on the classical MHC class I and II genes encoding the antigen presentation molecules, in rhesus macaques 245 Mamu‐A1 , 588 Mamu‐B , 50 Mamu‐DPA1 , 66 Mamu‐DPB1 , 47 Mamu‐DQA1 , 79 Mamu‐DQB1 , 28 Mamu‐DRA and 261 Mamu‐DRB alleles have been documented (numbers are according release 3.4.0.0) (de Groot et al., 2019;Maccari et al., 2017). The Mamu‐A1 and Mamu‐B alleles have been subject to expansion, form their own monophyletic groups and do not cluster together with human or great ape Mhc class I A and B alleles, respectively (de Groot et al., 2012).…”