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1.
The early stages of murine B-cell differentiation are characterized by a series of immunoglobulin gene rearrangements which are required for the assembly of heavy(H) and light(L)-chain variable regions from germline gene segments. Rearrangement at the heavy-chain locus is initiated first and consists of the joining of a diversity (DH) gene segment to a joining (JH) gene segment. This forms a DJH intermediate to which a variable (VH) gene segment is subsequently added. Light-chain gene rearrangement follows and consists of the joining of a VL gene segment to a JL gene segment: once a productive light-chain gene has been formed the cell initiates synthesis of surface immunoglobulin M (sIgM) receptors (reviewed in ref. 1). These receptors are clonally distributed and may undergo further diversification either by somatic mutation or possibly by continued recombinational events. Such recombinational events have been detected in the Ly 1+ B-cell lymphoma NFS-5, which has been shown to rearrange both lambda and H-chain genes subsequent to the formation of sIgM (mu kappa) molecules. Here we have analysed a rearrangement of the productive allele of NFS-5 and found that it is due to a novel recombination event between VH genes which results in the replacement of most or all of the coding sequence of the initial VHQ52 rearrangement by a germline VH7183 gene. Embedded in the VH coding sequence close to the site of the cross-over is the sequence 5' TACTGTG 3', which is identical to the signal heptamer found 5' of many DH gene segments. This embedded heptamer is conserved in over 70% of known VH genes. We suggest that this heptamer mediates VH gene replacement and may play an important part in the development of the antibody repertoire.  相似文献   

2.
E Webb  J M Adams  S Cory 《Nature》1984,312(5996):777-779
Chromosome translocations in B-lymphoid tumours are providing intriguing insights and puzzles regarding the role of immunoglobulin genes in the activation of the myc oncogene (reviewed in refs 1, 2). The 15 ; 12 translocations found in most murine plasmacytomas and the analogous 8 ; 14 translocation in human Burkitt's lymphomas involve scissions of murine chromosome 15 (human chromosome 8) near the 5' end of the c-myc gene and subsequent fusion near an immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene. The less well characterized 'variant' translocations found in about 15% of such tumours also involve the myc-bearing chromosome band, but exchange occurs with a chromosome bearing an immunoglobulin light-chain locus--in mice, the kappa-chain locus bearing chromosome 6 (refs 3-5) and, in man, chromosome 2 (or 22), at the same band at which the kappa (or lambda) locus lies (reviewed in ref. 1). The Burkitt variant translocations involve scissions 3' of c-myc; one 8 ; 22 translocation placed the C lambda locus just 3' of c-myc, but usually the chromosome 8 breakpoint is a greater, but unknown, distance away from c-myc, more than 20 kilobases (kb) in one 8 ; 2 translocation involving the C kappa gene. Little is known about the murine 6 ; 15 translocations, although a C kappa gene cloned from one plasmacytoma (PC7183) is linked, via chromosome 12 sequences, to an unidentified region of chromosome 15 (ref. 11). We describe here the chromosome fusion region from plasmacytoma ABPC4, which displays the typical reciprocal 6;15 translocations. We find that the chromosome 6 breakpoint is near C kappa but, unlike those in the heavy-chain locus, not at a position where immunoglobulin genes normally recombine. Moreover, the chromosome 15 sequences involved in the ABPC4 translocation are not derived from the vicinity of c-myc.  相似文献   

3.
Dispersed human immunoglobulin kappa light-chain genes   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
The gene segments encoding the constant and variable regions of human immunoglobulin light chains of the kappa type (C kappa, V kappa) have been localized to chromosome 2. The distance between the C kappa and V kappa genes and the number of germline V kappa genes are unknown. As part of our work on the human V kappa locus, we have now mapped two solitary V kappa gene and a cluster of three V kappa genes to chromosomes 1, 15 and 22, respectively. The three genes that have been sequenced are nonprocessed pseudogenes, and the same may be true for the other two genes. This is the first time that V-gene segments have been found outside the C-gene-containing chromosomes. Our finding is relevant to current estimates of the size of the V kappa-gene repertoire. Furthermore, the dispersed gene regions have some unusual characteristics which may help to clarify the mechanism of dispersion.  相似文献   

4.
J H?chtl  H G Zachau 《Nature》1983,302(5905):260-263
Functional kappa light chain genes are formed during B-lymphocyte differentiation by the joining of initially separate V and J gene segments. It has been suggested that the intervening DNA is deleted, however the recent reports of what appear to be the reciprocal products of V and J recombination (back-to-back conserved V and J flanking sequences, called f-fragments) in DNA from mature lymphocytes make a simple deletion model unlikely. An alternative scheme involving unequal sister chromatid exchange has been proposed, supported by the evidence that the f-fragments seem to have segregated from the chromosome carrying the reciprocal complete kappa light chain gene (this and other schemes are briefly reviewed in ref. 8). We report here the analysis of a mouse myeloma (MOPC 41), in which a productive (kappa+) and a non-productive (kappa-) rearrangement has occured, which may help to clarify the mechanism of V-J joining. The aberrant rearrangement has led to the joining of a J1 gene segment to a sequence unrelated to any V gene (L10), and which in the germ line is flanked by a sequence resembling a V region recombination signal sequence. In this case no segregation of the reciprocal recombination products (kappa-41 and f41), which is a required step in sister chromatid exchange models, has taken place. An inversion model provides the simplest explanation of this J rearrangement.  相似文献   

5.
The association between certain human tumours and characteristic chromosomal abnormalities has led to the hypothesis that specific cellular oncogenes may be involved and consequently 'activated' in these genetic recombinations. This hypothesis has found strong support in the recent findings that some cellular homologues of retroviral onc genes are located in chromosomal segments which are affected by specific tumour-related abnormalities (see ref. 4 for review). In the case of human undifferentiated B-cell lymphoma (UBL) and mouse plasmacytomas, cytogenetic and chromosomal mapping data have identified characteristic chromosomal recombinations directly involving different immunoglobulin genes and the c-myc oncogene (for review see refs 5, 6). In UBLs carrying the t(8:14) translocation it has been shown that the human c-myc gene is located on the region of chromosome 8 (8q24) which is translocated to the immunoglobulin heavy-chain locus (IHC) on chromosome 14. Although it is known that the chromosomal breakpoints can be variably located within or outside the c-myc locus and within the IHC mu (refs 9, 11) or IHC gamma locus, the recombination sites have not been exactly identified and mapped in relation to the functional domains of these loci. We report here the identification and characterization of two reciprocal recombination sites between c-myc and IHC mu in a Burkitt lymphoma. Nucleotide sequencing of the cross-over point joining chromosomes 8 and 14 on chromosome 14q--shows that the onc gene is interrupted within its first intron and joined to the heavy-chain mu switch region. This recombination predicts that the translocated onc gene would code for a rearranged mRNA but a normal c-myc polypeptide.  相似文献   

6.
B lymphocytes originate from pluripotential haematopoietic stem cells and differentiate into immunoglobulin (Ig)-producing cells. B-cell lineage differentiation is accompanied by two types of immunoglobulin gene rearrangements--rearrangement of V, D and J gene segments to create a functional V gene and rearrangement of CH genes for heavy-chain switching. These results, however, have been obtained mainly by analysis of immunoglobulin gene organization of myeloma cells. Baltimore and his colleagues have established Abelson murine leukaemia virus (A-MuLV)-transformed cell lines and found a few lines capable of carrying out kappa-gene rearrangement or undergoing isotype switching during in vitro culture. To study early B-cell lineage differentiation events, we have now also established A-MuLV-transformed cell lines which are capable of differentiating from mu- to mu+ and of undergoing continuing rearrangement of heavy-chain genes in culture. Analysis of immunoglobulin gene organization of these transformed cells revealed that mu- cells have already undergone DNA rearrangements involving JH segments but an additional rearrangement of JH segments is required for initiation of mu-chain synthesis. Southern blot analysis of the DNA and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of intracytoplasmic mu-chain show that mu-chain diversity with respect to antigen specificity may be generated during this second rearrangement process. As no rearrangement of light-chain genes takes place in these cells, this implies that light-chain gene rearrangement requires some further change, or a different enzyme.  相似文献   

7.
The human T-cell receptor alpha-chain gene maps to chromosome 14   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The T-cell receptor for antigen has been identified as a disulphide-linked heterodimeric glycoprotein of relative molecular mass (Mr) 90,000 comprising an alpha- and a beta-chain. The availability of complementary DNA clones encoding mouse and human beta-chains has allowed a detailed characterization of the genomic organization of the beta-chain gene family and has revealed that functional beta-chain genes in T cells are generated from recombination events involving variable (V), diversity (D), joining (J) and constant (C) gene segments. Recently, cDNA clones encoding mouse and human alpha-chains have been described; the sequences of these clones have indicated that functional alpha-chain genes are also generated from multiple gene segments. It is possible that chromosomal translocations involving T-cell receptor alpha- and beta-chain genes have a role in T-cell neoplasms in much the same way as translocations involving immunoglobulin genes are associated with oncogenic transformation in B cells. In the latter case, the chromosomal localization of the immunoglobulin genes provided one of the first indications of the involvement of such translocations in oncogenic transformation. The chromosomal assignment of the alpha- and beta-chain genes may, therefore, provide equally important clues for T-cell neoplastic transformation. The chromosomal location of the mouse and human beta-chain gene family has been determined: the murine gene lies on chromosome 6 (refs 12, 13) whereas the human gene is located on chromosome 7 (refs 13, 14). Here we use a cDNA clone encoding the human alph-chain to map the corresponding gene to chromosome 14.  相似文献   

8.
J E Sims  A Tunnacliffe  W J Smith  T H Rabbitts 《Nature》1984,312(5994):541-545
Immune systems of vertebrates function via two types of effector cells, B and T cells, which are capable of antigen-specific recognition. The immunoglobulins, which serve as antigen receptors on B cells, have been well characterized with respect to gene structure, unlike the T-cell receptors. Recently, cDNA clones thought to correspond to the beta-chain locus of the human and mouse T-cell receptor have been described. The presumptive beta-chain clones detect gene rearrangement specifically in T-cell DNA and show homology with immunoglobulin light chains. The similarity of the T-cell beta-chain gene system to the immunoglobulin genes has been further demonstrated by the recent observation of variable- and constant-region gene segments as well as joining segments and putative diversity segments. We report here the characterization of cDNA and genomic clones encoding human T-cell receptor beta-chain genes. There are two constant-region genes (C beta 1 and C beta 2), each capable of rearrangement and expression as RNA. The gene arrangement, analogous to that of mouse beta-chain genes, shows strong evolutionary conservation of the dual C beta gene system in these two species.  相似文献   

9.
Y Tsujimoto  E Jaffe  J Cossman  J Gorham  P C Nowell  C M Croce 《Nature》1985,315(6017):340-343
The t(11;14) (q13;q32) chromosome translocation has been reported in diffuse small and large cell lymphomas and in chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B-CLL) and multiple myeloma. Because chromosome band 14q32 is involved in this translocation, as well as in the t(8;14) (q24;q32) translocation of the Burkitt tumour, interruption of the immunoglobulin heavy-chain locus was postulated for this rearrangement. We have cloned the chromosomal joinings between chromosomes 11 and 14 and also between chromosomes 14 and 18, in B-cell tumours carrying translocations involving these chromosomes, and suggested the existence of two translocated loci, bcl-1 and bcl-2, normally located on chromosomes 11 (band q13) and 18 (band q21) respectively, involved in the pathogenesis of human B-cell neoplasms. The results indicate that in the leukaemic cells from two different cases of CLL, the breakpoints on chromosome 11 are within 8 nucleotides of each other and on chromosome 14 involve the J4-DNA segment. Because we detected a 7mer-9mer signal-like sequence with a 12-base-long spacer on the normal chromosome 11, close to the breakpoint, we speculate that the t(11;14) chromosome translocation in CLL may be sequence specific and may involve the recombination system for immunoglobulin gene segment (V-D-J) joining.  相似文献   

10.
D Kitamura  K Rajewsky 《Nature》1992,356(6365):154-156
Burnet's clonal selection theory suggests that each B lymphocyte is committed to a single antibody specificity. This is achieved by a programme of somatic rearrangements of the gene segments encoding antibody variable (V) regions, in the course of B-cell development. Evidence from immunoglobulin-transgenic mice and immunoglobulin-gene-transfected transformed pre-B cells suggest that the membrane form of the immunoglobulin heavy (H) chain of class mu (microns), expressed from a rearranged H-chain (IgH) locus, may signal allelic exclusion of the homologous IgH locus in the cell and initiation of light (L)-chain gene rearrangement in the Ig kappa loci. We report here that targeted disruption of the membrane exon of the mu chain indeed results in the loss of H-chain allelic exclusion. But, some kappa chain gene rearrangement is still observed in the absence of micron expression.  相似文献   

11.
Human immunoglobulin light-chain genes become rearranged in an ordered fashion during pre-B-cell development such that rearrangement generally occurs in kappa genes before lambda genes (refs 1,2). This ordered process includes an unanticipated deletion of the constant kappa (C kappa) gene and kappa enhancer sequence which precedes lambda rearrangement, and the site of this deletional recombination was located 3' to the joining (J kappa) segments in 75% of cases studied. We have now characterized the recombinational element responsible for this event on three separate alleles and found them to be identical. This kappa-deleting element recombined site-specifically with a palindromic signal (CACAGTG) located in the J kappa-C kappa intron. All losses of C kappa genes in other human B cells were mediated by this determinant, including the 25% of instances when this element recombined with sequences 5' to J kappa. In contrast, the kappa-deleting element remained in its germline form on all successful kappa-producing alleles. Moreover, kappa loss is an evolutionarily conserved event, as the kappa-deleting element appears to be the human homologue of the murine RS sequence. Our results suggest that this element may help ensure isotypic and allelic exclusion of light chains and may be involved in the ordered use of human light-chain genes.  相似文献   

12.
S Fujimoto  H Yamagishi 《Nature》1987,327(6119):242-243
The genes for the T-cell receptor, like the immunoglobulin genes, are rearranged as DNA. The mechanism of this rearrangement is not clear; unequal crossover between chromosomes and the looping-out and excision of the excess DNA have both been suggested. We isolated small polydisperse circular (spc) DNAs from mouse thymocytes and cloned them into a phage vector. Of the 56 clones we analysed, nine contained sequences homologous to T-cell receptor alpha-chain joining (J alpha) segments. We have characterized one of these clones; it contains one J alpha segment, and the product out of the recombination of a variable region of the alpha-chain gene (V alpha) with a J alpha gene segment. This is the first demonstration of the presence in extrachromosomal DNA of a reciprocal recombination product of any rearranging immunoglobulin or T-cell receptor gene. The finding verifies that V alpha-J alpha joining can occur by the looping-out and excision of chromosomal DNA.  相似文献   

13.
F C Mills  L M Fisher  R Kuroda  A M Ford  H J Gould 《Nature》1983,306(5945):809-812
An immunoglobulin polypeptide chain is encoded by multiple gene segments that lie far apart in germ-line DNA and must be brought together to allow expression of an immunoglobulin gene active in B lymphocytes. For the immunoglobulin heavy chain genes, one of many variable (V) region genes becomes joined to one of several diversity (D) segments which are fused to one of several joining (J) segments lying 5' of the constant region (C) genes. Here we show that the rearranged mu genes of an IgM-producing human B-lymphocyte cell line exhibit pancreatic deoxyribonuclease (DNase I) hypersensitive sites in the JH-C mu intron that are absent in naked DNA or the chromatin of other differentiated cell types. DNA sequence analysis reveals that the major hypersensitive site maps to a conserved region of the JH-C mu intron recently shown to function as a tissue-specific enhancer of heavy-chain gene expression. A similar association of an enhancer-like element with a DNase I hypersensitive site has been reported for the mouse immunoglobulin light-chain J kappa-C kappa intron. These results implicate disruption of local chromatin structure in the mechanism of immunoglobulin enhancer function.  相似文献   

14.
Z Dembi?  W Bannwarth  B A Taylor  M Steinmetz 《Nature》1985,314(6008):271-273
Serological and molecular genetic analyses of T-cell clones have shown that the T-cell antigen receptor apparently comprises two glycosylated, disulphide-linked polypeptide chains (alpha and beta), both of which span the cell membrane. Cloning of the genes encoding the two chains from mouse and human DNA has shown that the alpha- and beta-chains are composed of variable (V) and conserved (C) regions in agreement with peptide mapping data. Gene segments encoding variable and conserved domains of the beta-chain have been identified and undergo rearrangements during T-cell differentiation. The genes encoding the alpha-chain, so far described at the level of complementary DNA clones, also identify DNA rearrangements. Thus, the genes encoding the T-cell receptor show the same structure and dynamic behaviour as immunoglobulin genes, indicating that the two gene families belong to the same supergene family; this evolutionary relationship is supported by the fact that the genes encoding the beta-chain of the T-cell receptor are closely linked to immunoglobulin kappa light-chain genes on chromosome 6 in mouse. In man, however, the beta genes map to chromosome 7 (ref. 14) whereas the kappa-chain genes are located on chromosome 2, indicating that linkage between the two gene families is not needed for proper expression. Here we describe genomic clones encoding the constant portion of the T-cell receptor alpha-chain and map the gene to chromosome 14 in mouse, close to the gene for purine nucleoside phosphorylase (Np-2) which, in man, has been associated with T-cell immunodeficiencies.  相似文献   

15.
The newly described T-cell receptor (TCR) delta locus is located inside the TCR alpha locus, between variable region (V)alpha and joining region (J)alpha. Although the delta and alpha TCR genes are physically linked on the same chromosome, they are sequentially expressed during T-cell development. This implies the existence of a highly efficient regulatory mechanism by which these two genes are independently rearranged. We have recently described a genetic element 'T early alpha' (TEA) in humans transcribed in foetal thymocytes, spliced alternatively to constant region (C)alpha, and located between the TCR-delta locus (5') and the group of J alpha segments (3'). Importantly, TEA flanks a common site of rearrangement in the thymus, and distinguishes cells using TCR-gamma/delta (TEA in germline configuration) from cells using TCR-alpha/beta (TEA deleted on both chromosomes). In order to understand this TEA-associated recombination we analysed genomic clones representing these thymic rearrangements. We show that the TEA-associated recombination deletes the delta locus before productive (V delta D delta J delta) rearrangement. The diversity (D)delta and J delta regions, which provide the major source of delta gene diversity, are eliminated as a consequence of delta gene deletion and cannot then be used in conjunction with an alpha-TCR. We propose that the TEA-associated deletion of TCR-delta precedes the formation of an alpha-TCR and could down-regulate TCR-delta formation in maturing thymus.  相似文献   

16.
H Schnell  M Steinmetz  H G Zachau  I Schechter 《Nature》1980,286(5769):170-173
Immunoglobulin light chain genes of the mouse are composed in germ-line DNA of four separate segments, the leader, V (variable), J (joining) and C (constant) segments. In immunocompetent cells a V and J gene segment are joined by a site-specific recombination event. In variants of the mouse myeloma MPC11 a so-called kappa (k) light chain fragment is expressed which consists of the MOPC321 leader peptide, joined to the kappa constant region peptide. Using the Southern blotting technique we found that the gene coding for the light chain fragment has apkparently been generated by an aberrant translocation of a V gene segment identical or very similar to the MOPC321 V gene segment into the large intervening sequence between the J and the C gene segments. The resulting deletion of the splice signals of the J segments could be the reason for the observed splicing between leader and C region sequences, a phenomenon which may be of general interest for the understanding of the splicing mechanism.  相似文献   

17.
Specific chromosomal translocations have been observed in several human and animal tumours and are believed to be important in tumorigenesis. In many of these translocations the breakpoints lie near cellular homologues of transforming genes, suggesting that tumour development is partly due to the activation of these genes. The best-characterized example of such a translocation occurs in mouse plasmacytoma and human B-cell lymphoma, where c-myc, the cellular homologue of the viral oncogene myc, is brought into close proximity with either the light- or heavy-chain genes of the immunoglobulin loci, resulting in a change in the regulation of the myc gene. T-cell malignancies also have characteristic chromosomal abnormalities, many of which seem to involve the 14q11-14q13 region. This region has recently been found to contain the alpha-chain genes of the human T-cell antigen receptor. Here we determine more precisely the chromosome breakpoints in two patients whose leukaemic T cells contain reciprocal translocations between 11p13 and 14q13. Segregation analysis of somatic cell hybrids demonstrates that in both patients the breakpoints occur between the variable (V) and constant (C) region genes of the T-cell receptor alpha-chain locus, resulting in the translocation of the C-region gene from chromosome 14 to chromosome 11. As the 11p13 locus has been implicated in the development of Wilms' tumour, it is possible that either the Wilms' tumour gene or a yet unidentified gene in this region is involved in tumorigenesis and is altered as a result of its translocation into the T-cell receptor alpha-chain locus.  相似文献   

18.
19.
H Sakano  K Hüppi  G Heinrich  S Tonegawa 《Nature》1979,280(5720):288-294
The entire nucleotide sequence of a 1.7-kilobase embryonic DNA fragment containing five joining (J) DNA segments for mouse immunoglobulin kappa chain gene has been determined. Each J DNA segment can encode amino acid residues 96--108. Comparison of one of the five J DNA sequences with those of an embryonic variable (V) gene and a complete kappa chain gene permitted localisation of a precise recombination site. The 5'-flanking regions of J DNA segments could form an inverted stem structure with the 3'-non-coding region of embryonic V genes. This hypothetical structure and gel-blotting analysis of total embryo and myeloma DNA suggest that the somatic recombination may be accompanied by excision of an entire DNA segment between a V gene and a J DNA segment. Antibody diversity may in part be generated by modulation of the precise recombination sites.  相似文献   

20.
Three gene families that rearrange during the somatic development of T cells have been identified in the murine genome. Two of these gene families (alpha and beta) encode subunits of the antigen-specific T-cell receptor and are also present in the human genome. The third gene family, designated here as the gamma-chain gene family, is rearranged in murine cytolytic T cells but not in most helper T cells. Here we present evidence that the human genome also contains gamma-chain genes that undergo somatic rearrangement in leukaemia-derived T cells. Murine gamma-chain genes appear to be encoded in gene segments that are analogous to the immunoglobulin gene variable, constant and joining segments. There are two closely related constant-region gene segments in the human genome. One of the constant-region genes is deleted in all three T-cell leukaemias that we have studied. The two constant-region gamma-chain genes reside on the short arm of chromosome 7 (7p15); this region is involved in chromosomal rearrangements identified in T cells from individuals with the immunodeficiency syndrome ataxia telangiectasia and observed only rarely in routine cytogenetic analyses of normal individuals. This region is also a secondary site of beta-chain gene hybridization.  相似文献   

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