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Central European Journal of Immunology
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3/2013
vol. 38
 
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Structure analysis of goose immunoglobulin Y Fc fragment

Lei Jiang
,
Wei-Shan Chang
,
Hao Guo
,
Peng Sun
,
Xiu-Mei Dai

(Centr Eur J Immunol 2013; 38 (3): 299-304)
Online publish date: 2013/10/28
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- Structure analysis.pdf  [2.25 MB]
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Introduction

Immunoglobulin Y (IgY) is the principal serum antibody in birds and reptiles, and an IgY-like molecule was the evolutionary precursor of both mammalian IgG and IgE [1]. The IgY heavy chain consists of four constant domains, and the Fc fragment mainly contains two constant domains on the C-terminal, the Cu3 domain and the Cu4 domain [2, 3]. Immunoglobulin Y Fc fragment not only has the ability to activate the complement system, but also induces the binding of the antigen-antibody complex and the antigen-presenting cell through the Fc receptor (FcR). It can also promote the phagocytosis of the antigen-presenting cells to foreign antigens in the receptor-induced, and thus stimulate the cellular immune response of the body of specific antigens [4, 5]. Fc receptors link the specificity of the adaptive immune system with the effector mechanisms of innate immune cells [6]. Recently several avian IgY-Fc receptors have been identified, such as CHIR-AB1, a newly identified avian immunoglobulin receptor that includes both activating and inhibitory motifs and therefore classified as a potentially bifunctional receptor [7]. But the source animal of the research is chicken. Not too much in-depth study of goose in this field is done. Although the homology between the two species is high, there are still a lot of differences in their sequences. The nucleotide sequences and amino acid sequences of chicken and duck IgY have been assayed and submitted to the GenBank. The structure of the first non-mammalian Fc region of an antibody (chicken) has been determined [8].

In this study, we firstly cloned the goose IgY-Fc fragment gene and submitted the sequence to the GenBank. Then, we constructed a 3D structural model of goose IgY-Fc fragment through the fully automatic procedure of the SWISS-MODEL server. The results of the study will provide the basis for understanding the differences of IgY-Fc between avian and mammalian species. It can also lay the foundation for the study of goose IgY-Fc with its receptors.

Material and methods

Sample collection and tissue preparation



The domestic geese were purchased from a goose farm, Taian, China. Spleens were harvested and frozen in fridge (–20°C).



Total RNA isolation and synthesis of cDNA



Total RNA samples were extracted from spleens using Trizol (TransGen) and the cDNA pool was obtained using the PrimScript RT reagent Kit (TaKaRa).



RT-PCR, 3’Race and sequencing



A pair of homologous primers (Table 1A) was designed with DNASTAR 5.0 software in the conserved region (Fig. 1) of the duck (GenBank: CAA46322) and chicken (GenBank: S00390). All primers used in this study are listed in Table 1. With the primers, a cDNA fragment was amplified by RT-PCR using the first strand cDNAs as templates. The PCR reaction was performed under the following conditions in a thermal cycle: initial denaturation at 94°C for 5 min; 30 cycles of denaturation at 94°C for 30 s; annealing at 58°C for 30 s and extension at 72°C for 10 min. PCR products were analyzed by electrophoresis in 1% agarose, and purified by Agarose Gel DNA Extraction Kit (Shanghai Sangon Biotech Co., Ltd.). The products were cloned by Peasy-T1 (TransGen) and sent to Shanghai Sangon Biotech Co., Ltd. for sequencing. According to the results of sequencing, two pairs of specific primers (Table 1: 3’Race 1 and 2) were designed. In the 3’Race, Nested PCRs were performed with the first pair of 3’Race and the second pair for the second round. PCR products were analyzed by electrophoresis in 1% agarose, then purified and cloned into Peasy-T1, detected and sequencing was performed.



Multiple alignment and phylogenetic sequence analysis



The nucleotide sequence of goose IgY-Fc fragment, along with that of avian and several mammalian species from GenBank, were aligned by DNAMAN software. Phylogenetic analysis was made using DNAMAN5.2 software. Sequence analysis of the predicted goose IgY-Fc protein translated from the nucleotide sequence of goose IgY-Fc fragment was performed using the NCBI and ExPaSy software. Signal peptides were predicted using the SignalP 3.0 server. The domain structure of the caprine protein was analyzed on the SMART server. The SWISS-MODEL server was used to model the protein 3D conformation.

Results

Molecular cloning and analysis of goose IgY-Fc



A cDNA fragment of goose IgY heavy chain of 106 bp (Fig. 2) was obtained from single RT-PCR that was identified from the spleen cDNA library of domestic goose which are homologous to duck and chicken. Based on this sequence, the 3’terminal cDNA was cloned using 3’Race PCR. After splicing, a 782 bp fragment of IgY heavy chain was obtained. It covers the CH3 and CH4 region, i.e. Fc gene. It encodes a protein 202 amino acids in length.



Analysis of the translated amino acid sequence of IgY-Fc



The deduced amino acid sequence has an estimated isoelectric point and Mr of 6.47 and 22.32 KD, respectively. The number of negatively charged residues (Asp + Glu) in the sequence is 19. The total number of positively charged residues (Arg + Lys) is 17, indicating that the protein has an overall negative charge. The N-terminal of the sequence considered is I(Ile) residue. The instability index (II) is computed to be 48.53, which classifies the protein as unstable. The aliphatic index is 74.70 and the grand average of hydropathicity (GRAVY) is –0.168. The number of the phosphorylation sites predicted is 12 (Ser: 7 Thr: 4 Tyr: 1). No signal peptide was identified by the SignalP software. The secondary structure of the protein was predicted to be mainly random coil, separated by an extended strand and a-helix (Fig. 4).

The SMART domain architecture analysis results indicated that goose Fc has two domains. The first domain starts position 16 and ends position 90. The second domain starts position 121 and ends position 198. The predicted two domains have a structure that is similar to IGc1 domain which is classical of Ig-like domains resembling the antibody constant domain.



Alignment and phylogenetic analysis



The deduced amino acid sequence of IgY-Fc was compared with those of the several avian and mammalian species using DNAMAN (Fig. 5). The alignment analysis showed that goose Fc fragment shared 90.0% and 65.3% identity with those of duck (CAA46322) and chicken (S00390), and 36.0-41.0% identity to mammalian counterparts. The arrows labeled amino acid residues in Fig. 6 were well conserved in avian and mammalian, yet goose IgY-Fc Gly193, Thr200 were different from chicken’s equivalent amino acids. The phylogenetic tree was constructed from the deduced goose IgY-Fc and the IgG(Y) sequences from avian and mammalian with software DNAMAN 5.0. The result revealed the highest homology was with duck, and avian IgY-Fc formed a monophyletic group distinct from mammalian IgG-Fc (Fig. 6).



Predicted 3D structural model of goose Fc fragment



The fully automatic procedure on the SWISS-MODEL server was used to construct a 3D structural model of goose IgY-Fc fragment. The homology modeling revealed that this segment was similar to that of the avian (chicken) IgY-Fc in the Protein Data Bank (PDB:2w59A:349-557).

Not too many differences were found in the number of amino acids and orientation in the goose IgY-Fc fragment of the 3D structures. However, for example, at corresponding positions in the two structures, there were two “bend” and one a-helix between amino acids 504-515 in the avian IgY-Fc, but there was no bend or a-helix in goose IgY-Fc. Perhaps the absence of three residues at positions 155-158 in goose IgY-Fc caused the difference. But it was basically the same in both three-dimensional structures. They would have the same function. So the 3D structural analysis may provide the basis for studying the relationship between the structure and function of the IgY-Fc in the avian.

Discussion

The gene of Fc region antibody (chicken) of non-mammalian has been determined. The amino acid sequence of duck Fc showed 66.8% identity with those of chicken. Previous studies have reported that duck IgY failed to bind to chicken CHIR-AB1 [10]. It is likely that both chicken and duck IgY interact with their respective receptors in a broadly similar manner: the positive residue in the duck sequence being accommodated by a complementary site in the duck receptor, while other pairings remain identical [11]. The highest homology of goose IgY-Fc was with duck (89.6%). In the 3D structure of goose IgY-Fc, the sequence identity is 64.29% to the template (chicken:2w59A). For the FcRY-binding site, goose’s two amino acid residues differ from chicken’s equivalent amino acids.

It was said that IgY transport ability into egg yolks can be enhanced by substitution of amino acid residues located on the Cu3/Cu4 interface [12]. However, information about goose IgY-Fc and its receptors has not been available.

In this study, we isolated the goose IgY-Fc gene and used various bioinformatics tools to analyze the gene and predicted protein sequence. The nucleotide sequence was successfully submitted to GenBank; GenBank accession number is KC254644. The acquirement of the full sequence of goose IgY is underway in our lab. This study will provide the basis for understanding the differences of IgY-Fc between avian and mammalian species. It can also lay the foundation for the study of goose IgY-Fc with its receptors.



The authors declare no conflict of interests.



This work was supported by project J08LF60 of the Shandong (China) Provincial Department of Education.

References

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Copyright: © 2013 Polish Society of Experimental and Clinical Immunology This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.

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