학술논문

Single-cell transcriptomics of the naked mole-rat reveals unexpected features of mammalian immunity.
Document Type
Article
Source
PLoS Biology. 11/21/2019, Vol. 17 Issue 11, p1-32. 32p. 1 Color Photograph, 2 Diagrams.
Subject
*NAKED mole rat
*COMPARATIVE genomics
*GENE families
*CELL receptors
*KILLER cells
*IMMUNITY
Language
ISSN
1544-9173
Abstract
The immune system comprises a complex network of specialized cells that protects against infection, eliminates cancerous cells, and regulates tissue repair, thus serving a critical role in homeostasis, health span, and life span. The subterranean-dwelling naked mole-rat (NM-R; Heterocephalus glaber) exhibits prolonged life span relative to its body size, is unusually cancer resistant, and manifests few physiological or molecular changes with advancing age. We therefore hypothesized that the immune system of NM-Rs evolved unique features that confer enhanced cancer immunosurveillance and prevent the age-associated decline in homeostasis. Using single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) we mapped the immune system of the NM-R and compared it to that of the short-lived, cancer-prone mouse. In contrast to the mouse, we find that the NM-R immune system is characterized by a high myeloid-to-lymphoid cell ratio that includes a novel, lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-responsive, granulocyte cell subset. Surprisingly, we also find that NM-Rs lack canonical natural killer (NK) cells. Our comparative genomics analyses support this finding, showing that the NM-R genome lacks an expanded gene family that controls NK cell function in several other species. Furthermore, we reconstructed the evolutionary history that likely led to this genomic state. The NM-R thus challenges our current understanding of mammalian immunity, favoring an atypical, myeloid-biased mode of innate immunosurveillance, which may contribute to its remarkable health span. A single-cell transcriptomic study of the immune system of the cancer-resistant naked mole-rat reveals that this animal lacks natural killer (NK) cells, thought to be crucial for cancer resistance. In contrast to dramatically expanded NK cell receptor and MHC-I gene families in human and mouse genomes, the naked mole-rat genome lacks the expansion of NK cell receptor genes and only has two MHC-I genes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]