extrachromosomal recombination
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2007 ◽  
Vol 204 (13) ◽  
pp. 3195-3208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Davila ◽  
Feifei Liu ◽  
Lindsay G. Cowell ◽  
Anne E. Lieberman ◽  
Emily Heikamp ◽  
...  

Receptor editing is believed to play the major role in purging newly formed B cell compartments of autoreactivity by the induction of secondary V(D)J rearrangements. In the process of immunoglobulin heavy (H) chain editing, these secondary rearrangements are mediated by direct VH-to-JH joining or cryptic recombination signals (cRSs) within VH gene segments. Using a statistical model of RS, we have identified potential cRSs within VH gene segments at conserved sites flanking complementarity-determining regions 1 and 2. These cRSs are active in extrachromosomal recombination assays and cleaved during normal B cell development. Cleavage of multiple VH cRSs was observed in the bone marrow of C57BL/6 and RAG2:GFP and μMT congenic animals, and we determined that cRS cleavage efficiencies are 30–50-fold lower than a physiological RS. cRS signal ends are abundant in pro–B cells, including those recovered from μMT mice, but undetectable in pre– or immature B cells. Thus, VH cRS cleavage regularly occurs before the generation of functional preBCR and BCR. Conservation of cRSs distal from the 3′ end of VH gene segments suggests a function for these cryptic signals other than VH gene replacement.


Immunity ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Jung ◽  
Craig H. Bassing ◽  
Sebastian D. Fugmann ◽  
Hwei-Ling Cheng ◽  
David G. Schatz ◽  
...  

Genetics ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 149 (4) ◽  
pp. 1935-1943 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin A Bill ◽  
Walter A Duran ◽  
Nathan R Miselis ◽  
Jac A Nickoloff

Abstract Repair of all 12 single-base mismatches in recombination intermediates was investigated in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Extrachromosomal recombination was stimulated by double-strand breaks in regions of shared homology. Recombination was predicted to occur via single-strand annealing, yielding heteroduplex DNA (hDNA) with a single mismatch. Nicks were expected on opposite strands flanking hDNA, equidistant from the mismatch. Unlike studies of covalently closed artificial hDNA substrates, all mismatches were efficiently repaired, consistent with a nick-driven repair process. The average repair efficiency for all mispairs was 92%, with no significant differences among mispairs. There was significant strand-independent repair of G-T → G-C, with a slightly greater bias in a CpG context. Repair of C-A was also biased (toward C-G), but no A-C → G-C bias was found, a possible sequence context effect. No other mismatches showed evidence of biased repair, but among hetero-mismatches, the trend was toward retention of C or G vs. A or T. Repair of both T-T and G-T mismatches was much less efficient in mismatch repair-deficient cells (~25%), and the residual G-T repair was completely biased toward G-C. Our data indicate that single-base mismatches in recombination intermediates are substrates for at least two competing repair systems.


Genetics ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 147 (2) ◽  
pp. 743-753 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth M Miller ◽  
Heather L Hough ◽  
Jennifer W Cho ◽  
Jac A Nickoloff

Repair of single-base mismatches formed in recombination intermediates in vivo was investigated in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Extrachromosomal recombination was stimulated by double-strand breaks (DSBs) introduced into regions of shared homology in pairs of plasmid substrates heteroallelic at 11 phenotypically silent mutations. Recombination was expected to occur primarily by single-strand annealing, yielding predicted heteroduplex DNA (hDNA) regions with three to nine mismatches. Product spectra were consistent with hDNA only occurring between DSBs. Nicks were predicted on opposite strands flanking hDNA at positions corresponding to original DSB sites. Most products had continuous marker patterns, and observed conversion gradients closely matched predicted gradients for repair initiated at nicks, consistent with an efficient nick-directed, excision-based mismatch repair system. Discontinuous patterns, seen in ∼10% of products, and deviations from predicted gradients provided evidence for less efficient mismatch-specific repair, including G-A → G-C specific repair that may reflect processing by a homologue of Escherichia coli MutY. Mismatch repair was >80% efficient, which is higher than seen previously with covalently closed, artificial hDNA substrates. Products were found in which all mismatches were repaired in a single tract initiated from one or the other nick. We also observed products resulting from two tracts of intermediate length initiated from two nicks.


1997 ◽  
Vol 17 (8) ◽  
pp. 4544-4552 ◽  
Author(s):  
C J McMahan ◽  
M J Difilippantonio ◽  
N Rao ◽  
E Spanopoulou ◽  
D G Schatz

The variable portions of antigen receptor genes are assembled from component gene segments by a site-specific recombination reaction known as V(D)J recombination. The RAG1 and RAG2 proteins are the critical lymphoid cell-specific components of the recombination enzymatic machinery and are responsible for site-specific DNA recognition and cleavage. Previous studies had defined a minimal, recombinationally active core region of murine RAG1 consisting of amino acids 384 to 1008 of the 1,040-residue RAG1 protein. No recombination function has heretofore been ascribed to any portion of the 383-amino-acid N-terminal region that is missing from the core, but it seems likely to be of functional significance, based on its evolutionary conservation. Using extrachromosomal recombination substrates, we demonstrate here that the N-terminal region enhances the recombination activity of RAG1 by up to an order of magnitude in a variety of cell lines. Deletion analysis localized a region of the N terminus critical for this effect to amino acids 216 to 238, and further mutagenesis demonstrated that a small basic amino acid motif (BIIa) in this region is essential for enhancing the activity of RAG1. Despite the fact that BIIa is important for the interaction of RAG1 with the nuclear localization factor Srp-1, it does not appear to enhance recombination by facilitating nuclear transport of RAG1. A variety of models for how this region stimulates the recombination activity of RAG1 are considered.


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