(mouse immunoglobulin genes/recombinant DNA/gene rearrangeme
暂无分享,去创建一个
The mechanism of generating immunoglobulin light chain genes by rearrangement of variable (V), joining (J), and constant (C) gene segments is still unknown. It has been discussed mostly in terms of excision and deletion of the DNA between the recombined V and J gene segments. However, the finding in DNA digests from the mouse myeloma T of a fragment (called f-T) that contains the 3' flank of a VK and the 5' flank of a J1 gene segment argued against a simple deletion mechanism (Steinmetz, M., Al- tenburger, W. & Zachau, H. G. (1980) Nucleic Acids Res. 8, 1709-1720). The origin of fragment f-T has now been investigated by cloning and determining the sequence of the germ-line V gene segment that apparently participated in its formation. Moreover, analogous fragments containing flanking sequences were isolated from the myelomas MOPC 173 and 41 (f-173 and f-41) and studied by sequence analysis. The f fragments appear to be recombination products of V-J rearrangements reciprocal to rearranged K genes but, at least in the cases of f-T and f-173, not of the rearranged V genes present in the same tumor cell. This fact is best explained by a sister chromatid exchange mechanism of V-J recombination because, by this model, the rearranged V genes and the reciprocal flank recombination products would segregate into different cells during the following mitosis. The possibility is suggested that there exists in lymphocyte differentiation more than one mechanism of V-J recombination.
[1] R. Perry,et al. Aberrant rearrangements contribute significantly to the allelic exclusion of immunoglobulin gene expression , 1981, Nature.
[2] Hitoshi Sakano,et al. Sequences at the somatic recombination sites of immunoglobulin light-chain genes , 1979, Nature.
[3] L. Hood,et al. Immunoglobulins with hapten‐binding activity: structure‐function correlations and genetic implications , 1978, European journal of immunology.