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MICHAEL J. WADE RECEIVES 2009 SEWALL WRIGHT AWARD

The Quarterly Review of Biology is proud to announce that Dr. Michael J. Wade, one of our Associate Editors and Distinguished Professor of biology at Indiana University, has been selected to receive the 2009 Sewall Wright Award. The Sewall Wright Award is given annually by the American Society of Naturalists to honor a senior investigator who is making fundamental contributions to promoting the conceptual unification of the biological sciences.

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100 Reasons to Change How We Think About Genetics
Article Reviews Evidence for Epigenetic Inheritance in Wide Range of Species

Increasingly, biologists are finding that non-genetic variation acquired during the life of an organism can sometimes be passed on to offspring—a phenomenon known as epigenetic inheritance. An article to be published this week in The Quarterly Review of Biology lists over 100 well-documented cases of epigenetic inheritance between generations of organisms, and suggests that non-DNA inheritance happens much more often than scientists previously thought.

In the News

Featured in The Times of India
"It's the smell, silly, not the looks" March 18, 2009
Female Mate Choice in Mammals
Tim Clutton-Brock and Katherine McAuliffe
Study of olfactory mating cues is still in its infancy, Clutton-Brock and McAuliffe said. But they believe that this line of research will continue to reveal much about mammalian mate choice. These findings were published in the March issue of The Quarterly Review of Biology.

December 2004

Volume 79, Number 4
The Quarterly Review of Biology, December 2004, vol. 79, no. 4
0033-5770/2004/7904-0010$15.00
DOI: 10.1086/426088

The Evolution of Alloimmunity and the Genesis of Adaptive Immunity

Stephen J. Gould

Department of Biological Chemistry, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore, Maryland 21205 USA sgould@jhmi.edu

James E. K. Hildreth

Department of Pharmacology and Molecular Sciences, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore, Maryland 21205 USA

Amy M. Booth

Department of Biological Chemistry, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore, Maryland 21205 USA

Infectious agents select for host immune responses that destroy infectious nonself yet maintain tolerance to self. Here we propose that retroviruses and other host‐antigen associated pathogens (HAAPs) select for the genetic, biochemical, and cell biological properties of alloimmunity, also known as the histocompatibility or tissue rejection response. This hypothesis predicts the major observations regarding histocompatibility responses, including: (i) their existence in animals as diverse as sponges and humans; (ii) extreme polymorphism and balanced allele frequencies at histocompatibility loci, including the human MHC and blood group loci; (iii) the frequency dependent selection of histocompatibility alleles; (iv) the ancient age of many alloantigenic polymorphisms; (v) the high ratio of nonsynonymous mutations to synonymous mutations at histocompatibility loci; (vi) disassortative mating based on MHC alleles; (vii) the inability to explain the existence and continuing selection of histocompatibility alleles by other more conventional biochemical and genetic paradigms; and (viii) the susceptibility of HAAPs, particularly retroviruses such as HIV (human immunodeficiency virus), to histocompatibility reactions. In addition, the hypothesis that HAAPs select the forms and molecules of alloimmunity offers simple explanations for the evolution of histocompatibility systems over time, the initial selection of hypervariable immune mechanisms, and the genesis of adaptive immunity.

KEYWORDS

retrovirus, pathogen, frequency dependent selection, MHC allele, disassortative mating, HIV, trans‐species polymorphism, histocompatibility, transfusion, transplantation, blood group antigen

Cited by

AB Johan Groeneveld, Lonneke Smeding, Melanie van der Heijden. (2009) WHAT IS NEW IN SHOCK, JULY 2009?. Shock 32:1, 1-3
Online publication date: 1-Aug-2009.
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