Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Zeev Pancer is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Zeev Pancer.


Nature | 2004

Somatic diversification of variable lymphocyte receptors in the agnathan sea lamprey

Zeev Pancer; Chris T. Amemiya; Götz R. A. Ehrhardt; Jill Ceitlin; G. Larry Gartland; Max D. Cooper

Although jawless vertebrates are apparently capable of adaptive immune responses, they have not been found to possess the recombinatorial antigen receptors shared by all jawed vertebrates. Our search for the phylogenetic roots of adaptive immunity in the lamprey has instead identified a new type of variable lymphocyte receptors (VLRs) composed of highly diverse leucine-rich repeats (LRR) sandwiched between amino- and carboxy-terminal LRRs. An invariant stalk region tethers the VLRs to the cell surface by means of a glycosyl-phosphatidyl-inositol anchor. To generate rearranged VLR genes of the diversity necessary for an anticipatory immune system, the single lamprey VLR locus contains a large bank of diverse LRR cassettes, available for insertion into an incomplete germline VLR gene. Individual lymphocytes express a uniquely rearranged VLR gene in monoallelic fashion. Different evolutionary strategies were thus used to generate highly diverse lymphocyte receptors through rearrangement of LRR modules in agnathans (jawless fish) and of immunoglobulin gene segments in gnathostomes (jawed vertebrates).


Genome Research | 2008

The amphioxus genome illuminates vertebrate origins and cephalochordate biology

Linda Z. Holland; Ricard Albalat; Kaoru Azumi; Èlia Benito-Gutiérrez; Matthew J. Blow; Marianne Bronner-Fraser; Frédéric Brunet; Thomas Butts; Simona Candiani; Larry J. Dishaw; David E. K. Ferrier; Jordi Garcia-Fernàndez; Jeremy J. Gibson-Brown; Carmela Gissi; Adam Godzik; Finn Hallböök; Dan Hirose; Kazuyoshi Hosomichi; Tetsuro Ikuta; Hidetoshi Inoko; Masanori Kasahara; Jun Kasamatsu; Takeshi Kawashima; Ayuko Kimura; Masaaki Kobayashi; Zbynek Kozmik; Kaoru Kubokawa; Vincent Laudet; Gary W. Litman; Alice C. McHardy

Cephalochordates, urochordates, and vertebrates evolved from a common ancestor over 520 million years ago. To improve our understanding of chordate evolution and the origin of vertebrates, we intensively searched for particular genes, gene families, and conserved noncoding elements in the sequenced genome of the cephalochordate Branchiostoma floridae, commonly called amphioxus or lancelets. Special attention was given to homeobox genes, opsin genes, genes involved in neural crest development, nuclear receptor genes, genes encoding components of the endocrine and immune systems, and conserved cis-regulatory enhancers. The amphioxus genome contains a basic set of chordate genes involved in development and cell signaling, including a fifteenth Hox gene. This set includes many genes that were co-opted in vertebrates for new roles in neural crest development and adaptive immunity. However, where amphioxus has a single gene, vertebrates often have two, three, or four paralogs derived from two whole-genome duplication events. In addition, several transcriptional enhancers are conserved between amphioxus and vertebrates--a very wide phylogenetic distance. In contrast, urochordate genomes have lost many genes, including a diversity of homeobox families and genes involved in steroid hormone function. The amphioxus genome also exhibits derived features, including duplications of opsins and genes proposed to function in innate immunity and endocrine systems. Our results indicate that the amphioxus genome is elemental to an understanding of the biology and evolution of nonchordate deuterostomes, invertebrate chordates, and vertebrates.


Nature Genetics | 2013

Sequencing of the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus) genome provides insights into vertebrate evolution.

Jeramiah J. Smith; Shigehiro Kuraku; Carson Holt; Tatjana Sauka-Spengler; Ning Jiang; Michael S. Campbell; Mark Yandell; Tereza Manousaki; Axel Meyer; Ona Bloom; Jennifer R. Morgan; Joseph D. Buxbaum; Ravi Sachidanandam; Carrie Sims; Alexander S. Garruss; Malcolm Cook; Robb Krumlauf; Leanne M. Wiedemann; Stacia A. Sower; Wayne A. Decatur; Jeffrey A. Hall; Chris T. Amemiya; Nil Ratan Saha; Katherine M. Buckley; Jonathan P. Rast; Sabyasachi Das; Masayuki Hirano; Nathanael McCurley; Peng Guo; Nicolas Rohner

Lampreys are representatives of an ancient vertebrate lineage that diverged from our own ∼500 million years ago. By virtue of this deeply shared ancestry, the sea lamprey (P. marinus) genome is uniquely poised to provide insight into the ancestry of vertebrate genomes and the underlying principles of vertebrate biology. Here, we present the first lamprey whole-genome sequence and assembly. We note challenges faced owing to its high content of repetitive elements and GC bases, as well as the absence of broad-scale sequence information from closely related species. Analyses of the assembly indicate that two whole-genome duplications likely occurred before the divergence of ancestral lamprey and gnathostome lineages. Moreover, the results help define key evolutionary events within vertebrate lineages, including the origin of myelin-associated proteins and the development of appendages. The lamprey genome provides an important resource for reconstructing vertebrate origins and the evolutionary events that have shaped the genomes of extant organisms.


Science | 2005

Diversity and Function of Adaptive Immune Receptors in a Jawless Vertebrate

Matthew N. Alder; Igor B. Rogozin; Lakshminarayan M. Iyer; Galina V. Glazko; Max D. Cooper; Zeev Pancer

Instead of the immunoglobulin-type antigen receptors of jawed vertebrates, jawless fish have variable lymphocyte receptors (VLRs), which consist of leucine-rich repeat (LRR) modules. Somatic diversification of the VLR gene is shown here to occur through a multistep assembly of LRR modules randomly selected from a large bank of flanking cassettes. The predicted concave surface of the VLR is lined with hypervariable positively selected residues, and computational analysis suggests a repertoire of about 1014 unique receptors. Lamprey immunized with anthrax spores responded with the production of soluble antigen-specific VLRs. These findings reveal that two strikingly different modes of antigen recognition through rearranged lymphocyte receptors have evolved in the jawless and jawed vertebrates.


Nature Immunology | 2007

Evolution and diversification of lamprey antigen receptors: evidence for involvement of an AID-APOBEC family cytosine deaminase

Igor B. Rogozin; Lakshminarayan M. Iyer; Lizhi Liang; Galina V. Glazko; Victoria G Liston; Youri I. Pavlov; L. Aravind; Zeev Pancer

The variable lymphocyte receptors (VLRs) of jawless vertebrates such as lamprey and hagfish are composed of highly diverse modular leucine-rich repeats. Each lymphocyte assembles a unique VLR by rearrangement of the germline gene. In the lamprey genome, we identify here about 850 distinct cassettes encoding leucine-rich repeat modules that serve as sequence templates for the hypervariable VLR repertoires. The data indicate a gene conversion–like process in VLR diversification. Genomic analysis suggested a link between the VLR and platelet glycoprotein receptors. Lamprey lymphocytes express two putative deaminases of the AID-APOBEC family that may be involved in VLR diversification, as indicated by in vitro mutagenesis and recombination assays. Vertebrate acquired immunity could have therefore originated from lymphocyte receptor diversification by an ancestral AID-like DNA cytosine deaminase.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

High-affinity lamprey VLRA and VLRB monoclonal antibodies

Satoshi Tasumi; C. Alejandro Velikovsky; Gang Xu; S. Annie Gai; K. Dane Wittrup; Martin F. Flajnik; Roy A. Mariuzza; Zeev Pancer

Lamprey are members of the ancestral vertebrate taxon (jawless fish), which evolved rearranging antigen receptors convergently with the jawed vertebrates. But instead of Ig superfamily domains, lamprey variable lymphocyte receptors (VLRs) consist of highly diverse leucine-rich repeats. Although VLRs represent the only known adaptive immune system not based on Ig, little is known about their antigen-binding properties. Here we report robust plasma VLRB responses of lamprey immunized with hen egg lysozyme and β-galactosidase (β-gal), demonstrating adaptive immune responses against soluble antigens. To isolate monoclonal VLRs, we constructed large VLR libraries from antigen-stimulated and naïve animals in a novel yeast surface-display vector, with the VLR C-terminally fused to the yeast Flo1p surface anchor. We cloned VLRB binders of lysozyme, β-gal, cholera toxin subunit B, R-phycoerythrin, and B-trisaccharide antigen, with dissociation constants up to the single-digit picomolar range, equivalent to those of high-affinity IgG antibodies. We also isolated from a single lamprey 13 anti-lysozyme VLRA clones with affinities ranging from low nanomolar to mid-picomolar. All of these VLRA clones were closely related in sequence, differing at only 15 variable codon positions along the 244-residue VLR diversity region, which augmented antigen-binding affinity up to 100-fold. Thus, VLRs can provide a protective humoral antipathogen shield. Furthermore, the broad range of nominal antigens that VLRs can specifically bind, and the affinities achieved, indicate a functional parallelism between LRR-based and Ig-based antibodies. VLRs may be useful natural single-chain alternatives to conventional antibodies for biotechnology applications.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2009

Structure of a lamprey variable lymphocyte receptor in complex with a protein antigen

C. Alejandro Velikovsky; Lu Deng; Satoshi Tasumi; Lakshminarayan M. Iyer; Melissa C. Kerzic; L. Aravind; Zeev Pancer; Roy A. Mariuzza

Variable lymphocyte receptors (VLRs) are leucine-rich repeat proteins that mediate adaptive immunity in jawless vertebrates. VLRs are fundamentally different from the antibodies of jawed vertebrates, which consist of immunoglobulin (Ig) domains. We determined the structure of an anti–hen egg white lysozyme (HEL) VLR, isolated by yeast display, bound to HEL. The VLR, whose affinity resembles that of IgM antibodies, uses nearly all its concave surface to bind the protein, in addition to a loop that penetrates into the enzyme active site. The VLR–HEL structure combined with sequence analysis revealed an almost perfect match between ligand-contacting positions and positions with highest sequence diversity. Thus, it is likely that we have defined the generalized antigen-binding site of VLRs. We further demonstrated that VLRs can be affinity-matured by 13-fold to affinities as high as those of IgG antibodies, making VLRs potential alternatives to antibodies for biotechnology applications.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

A structural basis for antigen recognition by the T cell-like lymphocytes of sea lamprey.

L Deng; C.A Velikovsky; Gang Xu; Lakshminarayan M. Iyer; Satoshi Tasumi; M.C Kerzic; Martin F. Flajnik; L. Aravind; Zeev Pancer; Roy A. Mariuzza

Adaptive immunity in jawless vertebrates is mediated by leucine-rich repeat proteins called “variable lymphocyte receptors” (VLRs). Two types of VLR (A and B) are expressed by mutually exclusive lymphocyte populations in lamprey. VLRB lymphocytes resemble the B cells of jawed vertebrates; VLRA lymphocytes are similar to T cells. We determined the structure of a high-affinity VLRA isolated from lamprey immunized with hen egg white lysozyme (HEL) in unbound and antigen-bound forms. The VLRA–HEL complex demonstrates that certain VLRAs, like γδ T-cell receptors (TCRs) but unlike αβ TCRs, can recognize antigens directly, without a requirement for processing or antigen-presenting molecules. Thus, these VLRAs feature the nanomolar affinities of antibodies, the direct recognition of unprocessed antigens of both antibodies and γδ TCRs, and the exclusive expression on the lymphocyte surface that is unique to αβ and γδ TCRs.


Gene | 1997

A novel member of an ancient superfamily: Sponge (Geodia cydonium, Porifera) putative protein that features scavenger receptor cysteine-rich repeats

Zeev Pancer; Jessica Münkner; Isabel M. Müller; Werner E. G. Müller

Proteins featuring scavenger receptor cysteine-rich (SRCR) domains are prominent receptors known from vertebrates and from one phylum of invertebrates, the echinoderms. In the present study we report the first putative SRCR protein from the marine sponge Geodia cydonium (Porifera), a member of the lowest phylum of contemporary Metazoans. Two forms of SRCR molecules were characterized, which apparently represent alternative splicing of the same transcript. The long putative SRCR protein, of 1536 aa, features twelve SRCR repeats, a C-terminal transmembrane domain and a cytoplasmic tail. The sequence of the short form is identical with the long form except that it lacks a coding region near the C terminus, thus the 1195 aa deduced protein consists of only the first ten SRCR domains and the last 26 C-terminal aa residues, without the transmembrane domain. Homology searches revealed that the sponge putative SRCR protein shares with bovine T-cell antigen WC1 29.2% identity in 1054 aa overlap, 33.9% identity in 475 aa overlap with sea urchin speract and 56% identity in 110 aa overlap with macrophage scavenger receptor type I. Based upon the number and location of the conserved Cys residues, the sponge SRCR domain repeats were classified as belonging to group A of the SRCR superfamily. With twelve SRCR repeats, one more than those in any of the previously described SRCR proteins, and several membrane-bound and soluble forms, it seems that the most primitive known member of this family may be the structurally most complex one among SRCR containing proteins.


Immunogenetics | 1997

Molecular cloning and primary structure of a Rhesus (Rh)-like protein from the marine sponge Geodia cydonium

Jürgen Seack; Zeev Pancer; Isabel M. Müller; Werner E. G. Müller

Abstract In humans, the 30 000 Mr Rhesus (Rh) polypeptide D (RhD) is a dominant antigen (Ag) of the Rh blood group system. To date, an Rh-like protein has been found in chimpanzees, gorillas, gibbons, and rhesus monkeys. Related to the 30 000 Mr Rh Ag protein are two polypeptides of 50 000 Mr, the human 50 000 Mr Rh Ag and the RhD-like protein from Caenorhabditis elegans. The function of all these proteins is not sufficiently known. Here we characterize a cDNA clone (GCRH) encoding a putative 57 000 Mr polypeptide from the marine sponge Geodia cydonium, which shares sequence similarity both to the RhD Ag and the Rh50 glycoprotein. The sponge Rh-like protein comprises 523 aa residues; hydropathy analysis hints at the presence of ten transmembrane domains. An N-terminal hydrophobic cleavage signal sequence is missing, suggesting that the first membrane-spanning domain of the sponge Rh-like protein acts as a signal-anchor sequence. The sponge Rh-like protein, like the human Rh50, lacks the CLP motif which is characteristic of the 30 000 Mr RhD. In addition, the hydropathy profile of the sponge Rh-like protein is of a similar size and shape as that of human Rh50. This data indicates that the RhD and its structurally related Rh50 glycoprotein, which are highly immunogenic in humans, share a common ancestral molecule with the G. cydonium Rh-like protein.

Collaboration


Dive into the Zeev Pancer's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chris T. Amemiya

Benaroya Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

G. Larry Gartland

University of Alabama at Birmingham

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gang Xu

University of Maryland

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge