The article's lead section may need to be rewritten. (February 2019) |
The term "CD85" was originally used to refer to LILR1 which is now known as CD85j; however, there are a number of CD85 genes:
CD85 | Official LILR Nomenclature | ILT Nomenclature | Old LILT Nomenclature | Other Names |
---|---|---|---|---|
CD85i | LILRA1 | LILR6 (LIR6) | ||
CD85h | LILRA2 | ILT1 | LILR7 (LIR7) | |
CD85e | LILRA3 | ILT6 | LILR4 (LIR4) | HM31, HM43 |
CD85g | LILRA4 | ILT7 | ||
CD85j | LILRB1 | ILT2 | LILR1 (LIR1) | MIR7 |
CD85d | LILRB2 | ILT4 | LILR2 (LIR2) | MIR10 |
CD85a | LILRB3 | ILT5 | LILR3 (LIR3) | |
CD85k | LILRB4 | ILT3 | LILR5 | HM18 |
CD85c | LILRB5 | LILR8 | ||
CD85b | ILT8 or ILT9 | |||
CD85m | ILT10 | |||
CD85f | ILT11 | LILR9 |
LILR: leukocyte immunoglobulin-like receptor; ILT: immunoglobulin-like transcript; LIR: leukocyte inhibitory receptor; MIR: macrophage inhibitory receptor.
References
edit- ^ Brown, D.; Trowsdale, J.; Allen, R. (2004). "The LILR family: modulators of innate and adaptive immune pathways in health and disease". Tissue Antigens. 64 (3): 215–225. doi:10.1111/j.0001-2815.2004.00290.x. PMID 15304001.
- ^ Carrington, M; Norman, P (2003). The KIR Gene Cluster (e-book). NCBI Bookshelf.