SIGLEC7 (sialic acid binding Ig-like lectin 7 )

Certainty Style Key
Hover over keys for definitions:
True   Likely   Speculative
Human Uniqueness Compared to "Great Apes": 
Likely Difference
MOCA Domain: 
Genetics
MOCA Topic Authors: 

Siglec-7 is a sialic acid binding receptor found on natural killer cells of the  immune system, and may be involved in down-regulating immune responses. The homologous molecule is found on the same cell types and chimpanzees and gorillas and appears to strongly prefer to bind to the non-human sialic acid Neu5Gc. This is in contrast to the human molecule, which prefers to binding the human sialic acid Neu5Ac. Thus the ancestral condition of the molecule was likely to prefer the sialic acid that was lost during hominid evolution. It is reasonable to speculate that the human molecule had to undergo adjustments to accommodate to bind Neu5Ac ligand. Indeed, there are several amino acid changes in the binding pocket of human Siglec-7 that a potentially involved in this evolution adjustment. It is unclear whether the evolutionary adjustment of binding is complete, and whether or not this has any consequences for modern human immunity or disease.

Type of Human-Specific Changes in SIGLEC7:

Functional Differences in protein coding sequences

Related MOCA Topics
Timing

Timing of Appearance of the Difference in the Hominin Lineage.

For this entry assume that

  • the common ancestor of humans and old world monkeys was 25000 thousand (25 million) years ago
  • the common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees was 6000 thousand (6 million) years ago
  • the emergence of the genus Homo was 2000 thousand (2 million) years ago
  • the common ancestor of modern humans was 100 thousand years ago

 

Possible Appearance: 
2000 Thousand Years
Probable Appearance: 
500 Thousand Years
Definite Appearance: 
100 Thousand Years