Vol. 9, Issue 12, 1294-1304, December 1999
METHODS
Genetic Plasticity of V Genes Under Somatic Hypermutation: Statistical Analyses Using a New Resampling-Based Methodology
Mihaela
Oprea,1 and
Thomas B.
Kepler2,3
1 Computer Science Department, University of New Mexico,
Albuquerque and The Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, New Mexico USA;
2 Biomathematics Graduate Program, Department of Statistics,
North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina USA
Evidence for somatic hypermutation of immunoglobulin genes has been
observed in all of the species in which immunoglobulins have been
found. Previous studies have suggested that codon usage in
immunoglobulin variable (V) region genes is such that the
sequence-specificity of somatic hypermutation results in greater
mutability in complementarity-determining regions of the gene than in
the framework regions. We have developed a new resampling-based
methodology to explore genetic plasticity in individual V
genes and in V gene families in a statistically meaningful
way. We determine what factors contribute to this mutability difference
and characterize the strength of selection for this effect. We find
that although the codon usage in immunoglobulin V genes
renders them distinct among translationally equivalent sequences with
random codon usage, they are nevertheless not optimal in this regard.
We find that the mutability patterns in a number of species are similar
to those we find for human sequences. Interestingly, sheep sequences
show extremely strong mutability differences, consistent with the role
of somatic hypermutation in the diversification of primary antibody
repertoire in these animals. Human TCR V
sequences resemble immunoglobulin in mutability pattern, suggesting one
of several alternatives, that hypermutation is functionally operating
in TCR, that it was once operating in TCR or in the common precursor of
TCR and immunoglobulin, or that the hypermutation mechanism has evolved
to exploit the codon usage in immunoglobulin (and fortuitously, TCR)
rather than vice-versa. Our findings provide support to the hypothesis
that somatic hypermutation appeared very early in the phylogeny of
immune systems, that it is, to a large extent, shared between species,
and that it makes an essential contribution to the generation of the
antibody repertoire.
3
Corresponding author.
9:1294-1304 ©1999 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISSN 1088-9051/99 $5.00