ABO (ABO blood group )

Certainty Style Key
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True   Likely   Speculative
Human Uniqueness Compared to "Great Apes": 
Relative Difference
MOCA Domain: 
Genetics
MOCA Topic Authors: 

The ABO blood groups were discovered by Karl Landsteiner in 1900, and its Mendelian hereditary system was established by Bernstein in 1924.  Yamamoto et al. (1990) eventually determined the cDNA sequences of three major human ABO blood group gene alleles.  Because the allelic distribution of non-human primate ABO blood group locus was already examined using immunological techniques, partial nucleotide sequences of chimpanzee, gorilla, and other non-human primate ABO blood group genes were soon determined by Yamamoto and other reserchers (e.g., Kominato et al., 1992).  While humans have A, B, and O alleles, chimpanzee has only A and O,  the gorilla appers fixed with B alleles, then phylogenetically more remotely related orangutan has A, B, and O alleles like human (Blancher et al., 1997).  Saitou and Yamamoto (1997), applied phylogenetic network techniques to ABO blood group nucleotide sequence data, and proposed that the common ancestor of both hominods and Old World monkeys had A type allele, and that the B alleles then independently emerged then in human, gorilla, and in some Old World monkey lineages, by accumulating two nonsynonymous substitutions.  Because of large coalescence times among human A, B, and O2 alleles, as well as independent emergence of B alleles, this ABO blood group locus is probably under positive Darwinian balancing selection.  While some roles in modulating microbial infections are suggested, but real biological mechanism for positive selection is still not clear.

Genetics Topic Attributes

Gene symbols follow the HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee standard.

Gene Symbol:
ABO (ABO: ABO blood group (transferase A, alpha 1-3-N-acetylgalactosaminyltransferase; transferase B, alpha 1-3-galactosyltransferase))
Type of Human-Specific Changes:
Amino Acid Change
Polymorphism
Related MOCA Topics
References: 

Blancher A., Klein J., and Socha W. W. eds. (1997) Molecular Biology and Evolution of Blood Group and MHC Antigens in Primates.  Springer-Verlag, Berlin.

Yamamoto F, Clausen H, White T, Marken J, Hakomori S. (1990) Molecular genetic basis of the histo-blood group ABO system. Nature, 345:229-233.

Kominato Y, McNeill PD, Yamamoto M, Russell M, Hakomori S, Yamamoto F. (1992) Animal histo-blood group ABO genes. Biochem Biophys Res Commun., 189:154-164.

Saitou N. and Yamamoto F.-I. (1997) Evolution of primate ABO blood group genes and their homologous genes. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 14:399-411.