Multiple factors influence the contribution of individual immunoglobulin light chain genes to the naïve antibody repertoire
Autor: | Marjorie A Shapiro, Sean P Fitzsimmons, Antonina G Aydanian, Kathleen J Clark |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Předmět: |
Male
Receptor editing Molecular Sequence Data B-cell receptor Immunology Receptors Antigen B-Cell Biology Immunoglobulin light chain Antibodies Generation of diversity Antibody Repertoire Antigen Animals Gene Rearrangement B-Lymphocyte Light Chain Promoter Regions Genetic Gene Recombination Genetic Genetics Mice Inbred BALB C Rodent Tonic signaling Base Sequence Precursor Cells B-Lymphoid Gene rearrangement Cell biology biology.protein Female Genes Immunoglobulin Light Chain Antibody Immunoglobulin Heavy Chains Research Article B lymphocytes |
Zdroj: | BMC Immunology |
ISSN: | 1471-2172 |
DOI: | 10.1186/s12865-014-0051-2 |
Popis: | Background The naïve antibody repertoire is initially dependent upon the number of germline V(D)J genes and the ability of recombined heavy and light chains to pair. Individual VH and VL genes are not equally represented in naïve mature B cells, suggesting that positive and negative selection also shape the antibody repertoire. Among the three member murine Vκ10 L chain family, the Vκ10C gene is under-represented in the antibody repertoire. Although it is structurally functional and accessible to both transcriptional and recombination machinery, the Vκ10C promoter is inefficient in pre-B cell lines and productive Vκ10C rearrangements are lost as development progresses from pre-B cells through mature B cells. This study examined VH/Vκ10 pairing, promoter mutations, Vκ10 transcript levels and receptor editing as possible factors that are responsible for loss of productive Vκ10C rearrangements in developing B cells. Results We demonstrate that the loss of Vκ10C expression is not due to an inability to pair with H chains, but is likely due to a combination of other factors. Levels of mRNA are low in sorted pre-B cells and undetectable in B cells. Mutation of a single base in the three prime region of the Vκ10C promoter increases Vκ10C promoter function in pre-B cell lines. Pre-B and B cells harbor disproportionate levels of receptor-edited productive Vκ10C rearrangements. Conclusions Our findings suggest that the weak Vκ10C promoter initially limits the amount of available Vκ10C L chain for pairing with H chains, resulting in sub-threshold levels of cell surface B cell receptors, insufficient tonic signaling and subsequent receptor editing to limit the numbers of Vκ10C-expressing B cells emigrating from the bone marrow to the periphery. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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