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NOBELFÖRSAMLINGEN KAROLINSKA INSTITUTET
THE NOBEL ASSEMBLY AT THE KAROLINSKA INSTITUTE
10 October 1980
The Nobel Assembly of Karolinska
Institutet has decided today to award the Nobel Prize
in Physiology or Medicine for 1980 jointly to
Baruj Benacerraf, Jean Dausset and George
Snell
for their discoveries concerning "genetically determined
structures on the cell surface that regulate immunological
reactions".
The surface of all body cells is unique in every
individual. This unique character is detemined by genes
that regulate the formation of specific
protein-carbohydrate complexes (MHC) - the
histocompatibility antigens, or H antigens - found on the
cell membrane. These complexes derive their name (histo
denotes a relationship to tissue) from the fact they define
the capacity of a body tissue to exist in intimate contact
with another body tissue. H antigens determine the
interaction among the multitude of different cells
responsible for the body's immunological reactions.
Knowledge of the genetic regulation of the body's immune
response makes it possible to explain why different
individuals have different capabilities of defending
themselves against infections and why a cancer cell is
eliminated in some cases and enabled to grow into a tumor
in others. The genes that are important in this connection
have been demonstrated primarily in studies on mice and
humans, but they are found in all vertebrates. Knowledge of
H antigens is of great practical importance, for example,
in tissue transplantation (the transfer of tissues from one
individual to another) and for understanding the
relationship between the genetic constitution and disease.
Thus, it has been shown that certain H antigens predispose
certain individuals to certain diseases.
George Snell discovered the genetic factors that
determine the possibilities of transplanting tissue from
one individual to another. It was Snell who introduced the
concept of H antigens.
Jean Dausset demonstrated the existence of H
antigens in man and elucidated the genetic factors
regulating their formation.
Baruj Benacerraf showed that genetic factors
intimately related to the genes that determine an
individual's unique constitution of H antigens actually
regulate the interaction among the various cells belonging
to the immunological system and are thereby important to
the strength of an immunological reaction.
Every individual is unique. This is
true even with regard to the many details of the body's
structure. An important example are the antigens
(protein-carbohydrate complexes) found on every cell
membrane in the body. Through studies on the relatively
simple red blood cells, for example, it has been possible
to demonstrate the presence of different blood group
antigens. The formation of the antigens found in the cell
membrane is regulated by information found in the cell's
genes. Thus, the characteristics of the individual, as well
as of his cells, are genetically determined.
If cells with different surface properties come into
contact with each other within an organism, which is what
happens in the case of tissue transplantations, a reaction
takes place that results in the foreign cells being
rejected by the body. Transplantation, however, is an
artificial situation that does not normally occur in
nature. (An exception is the case of the pregnant woman.
The cell membranes of fetal cells contain antigens
determined by the genes inherited from the father.)
Therefore, the immunological reaction causing rejection of
a foreign transplant must exist in order to fill some other
function. This function is to see to it that the body's
cells do not alter their unique surface characteristics. A
change in these characteristics can occur, however, in
connection with a virus infection or when a normal cell is
transformed into a tumor cell. It is in this situation that
the body's ability to distinguish "self" from "non-self"
takes on its great significance. It is essential that this
defense system is carefully balanced so that the body does
not suddenly react against its own normal cells. If this
were to happen, a so-called auto-immune disease would
arise.
The genetic control of the body's immunological reactions
also plays a decisive role in the body's defense against
infectious agents. People show varying ability to mobilize
resistance against infections, and to a large extent an
individual's ability to react would seem to be genetically
determined.
George Snell has laid the foundation for our
knowledge of the laws that govern the body's ability to
distinguish "self" from "non-self". He did this by studies
on mouse strains that, through repeated sibling mating,
were made as genetically identical as monozygous twins.
Originally, he studied the possibility of transfering tumor
cells from one strain to another. The rules of
transplantability that he established proved to apply also
to normal tissue, such as skin. Snell showed that
transplantability was determined by the presence of special
structures (antigens) on the surface of the cell. He called
these antigens histocompatibility antigens. He showed,
further, that the formation of these antigens was
controlled by genes (designated H) found within a limited
area on a specific chromosome. This area was called the
major histocompatibility complex (MHC). So far it has been
possible to establish the existence of about 80 different
genes within the MHC in mice. With Snell's fundamental
discoveries came the birth of transplantation
immunology.
Between 1930 and 1950 when knowledge about transplantation
immunology was increasing in the mouse, nothing was known
about a corresponding system in man. Experimental tissue
transplants comparable to those practiced on laboratory
animals were not possible. Nevertheless, Jean
Dausset's research was to dramatically blaze the trail
to studies of rules for transplantation in man. Originally,
Dausset studied auto-immuno diseases, and one of his
methods was through immunological investigations of
patients who had undergone repeated blood transfusions. The
antibodies found in these patients proved to have no
significance at all when it came to auto-immune diseases,
but were instead an important indicator of differences in
the cell-membrane structure of white blood cells between
blood donors and recipients. When he went on to study the
antibodies of women who had given birth to several
children, Dausset was able to show that one single genetic
system, localized on one single chromosome, determined
these antigens. They came to be called human leukocyte
antigens (HLA), and the genes that determined their
formation, HLA genes (Figure 1). Thereby Dausset had
identified the human equivalent to the H-genes in mice. The
similarities between the two systems were soon shown to be
much greater than originally suspected. Dausset showed that
within the HLA system in man there were two dominating
regions, and Snell was subsequently able to show that this
was the case, too, with the H system in mice. All species
that have so far been studied (from among reptiles, fish,
birds and mammals) have been shown to have an MHC.
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Figure 1. The genetic material (DNA) is located in the cell nucleus in the form of long threads - chromosomes - that contract and can easily be studied during cell division. Humans have 46 chromosomes in each cell and these can be divided in 23 pairs which are numbered from 1 to 23. In other words, each chromosome exists in duplicate. (The illustration shows only one chromosome pair). On a tiny area of chromosome number 6 are found a large number of genes (MHC=major histocompatibility complex) that regulate, among other things, various immune reactions and the development of tissue antigens (HLA). HLA antigens are regulated by four different genes (A, B, C and D) each of which can occur in many alternative forms. A has at least 15 variants, B 29, C 9 and D 12. Every human can have at most two variants of each gene - one on each chromosome number 6. The probability for two unrelated people having exactly the same constitution is small since there are more than 100 millions possible combinations. Monozygote twins always have the same constitution of HLA antigens.
Dausset's discovery has many practical applications. With the aid of his system it is possible to type both donor and recipient in cases of kidney transplantation. Thereby the possibilities for a successful transplant are considerably increased (Figure 2). HLA typing has also been of great importance in the investigation of disputed paternity and in anthropological and evolutionary studies, i.e., comparison of groups of individuals belonging to different species and races. It has even been possible to H type mummies. It has also been found, somewhat unexpectedly, that persons with certain HLA antigens run a significantly greater risk of getting certain diseases than persons who lack those antigens (Table 1). The reason for this is still unclear. The portion of the genetic material that determines the formation of transplantation antigens (MHC) also includes hundreds of other genes, and one or several of these may be significant in this connection.
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Figure 2. 90 % to 100 % of all kidney transplantations between siblings with the same HLA antigen constitution are successful. The corresponding figure for siblings or for parents and children with partially different HLA antigen constitution is 70 % to 80 %. In cases in which a patient receives a kidney from an unrelated cadaver the possibility for a successful transplantation is about 50 %. In Sweden about 200 kidneys are transplanted each years; in the world about 10,000.
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A very important group of genes within the MHC has been demonstrated by Baruj Benacerraf. He has shown in elegant studies that the guinea pig's ability to mobilize an immune response against a certain antigen is determined by genetic factors. He called these factors Ir (immune response) genes. Several of these genes have been identified and found to be located within the same chromosome region that determines the formation of H antigens. Thus, this region has several very central functions for regulating various immunological reactions in the body. This is why the MHC has come to be referred to as a "super gene". The area of research opened up by Benacerraf now offers the possibility of analyzing the background of the varying ability of different individuals to mobilize an immune response to infections. Among the problems to be considered here are cell interaction, cell identification and the activation of immunological reactions.
Reference material
Cunningham, B.A.: The Structure and Function of
Histocompatibility Antigenes. Scientific American 1977,
237, 96-107.
Hanson, L.Å. & Wigzell, H.: Immunologi. Teori och
Klinik. Almqvist & Wiksell, 5:e upplagan, 1978.
Möller, E.: HLA och Sjukdom. Läkartidningen 1978,
75, 2373-2376.