The class III region of the human major histocompatibility complex (MHC) is gene-dense, averaging one gene every 10–20 kilobases (kb). Its gene order has been compared with other organisms. To extend this analysis further in another non-mammalian vertebrate, the compact genome of Fugu rubripes was investigated for the existence of orthologues of these class III genes and their relative arrangements. Orthologues of the M r 70000 heat shock protein (HSP70) and valyl-tRNA synthetase genes have been isolated. They do not seem to be closely physically linked as compared with mammals (supported by longer-range analysis using pulsed field gel electrophoresis). Random shotgun sequencing of the two Fugu cosmids containing the gene encoding valyl-tRNA synthetase revealed sequences resembling genes encoding tenascin-X, the nuclear antigen A/Ro of Sjogren’s syndrome, and the Landsteiner-Wiener blood group glycoprotein. These linkage relationships recapitulate some mammalian data, albeit imperfectly. Tenascin-X has been located both in the human and mouse Mhc class III regions. Three copies of a sequence found in the gene encoding Sjogren’s syndrome nuclear antigen A/Ro have been identified in the human Mhc class I region; the mouse Mhc class I region contains one copy. It is postulated that a fragmented gene pattern had existed prior to convergence in the ancestral mammalian immune response-related Mhc region, and that some of these genes had belonged to the same linkage group. Received: 17 February 1997 / Revised: 25 March 1997