Duplication and deletion in the human immunoglobulin epsilon genes.

Article Details

Citation

Max EE, Battey J, Ney R, Kirsch IR, Leder P

Duplication and deletion in the human immunoglobulin epsilon genes.

Cell. 1982 Jun;29(2):691-9.

PubMed ID
6288268 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The human IgE gene encodes a polypeptide chain that is involved in allergic reactions and in the immune response to parasitic disease in man. We have cloned three chromosomal regions corresponding to this sequence and find that two of them derive from curiously duplicated gene segments that also encode IgA constant-region genes. One of the IgE sequences corresponds to the active gene, and its structure defines a complete amino acid sequence of the human IgE constant region. The other cloned segment is a pseudogene from which the first two IgE coding domains have been deleted and replaced by a switch-like sequence that also occurs close to the normal IgE gene. The third IgE segment remains unlinked to the other heavy-chain genes. Evidently, the epsilon-alpha locus has been the site of several complicated genetic rearrangements during recent evolutionary time.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Immunoglobulin heavy constant epsilonP01854Details