| Literature DB >> 11739512 |
E Kompfner1, P Oliveira, A Montalbano, A J Feeney.
Abstract
Anti-dsDNA autoantibodies in MRL mice contain a higher than average frequency of atypical complementarity-determining regions 3, including those made with D-D rearrangements. It has been reported that MRL mice have an intrinsically high frequency of creating VDDJ rearrangements; however, we show in this study that the majority of these apparent D-D rearrangements in B cell progenitors can be accounted for by a very novel germline D(H) gene in mice of the Igh(j) haplotype. This gene has the appearance of a D to D rearrangement due to the duplication of 9 bp common to most DSP2 genes. Germline DSP2 genes from Igh(j) mice were amplified, cloned, and sequenced, showing the presence of this novel gene as well as a new allele of a conventional DSP2 gene. Sequencing of D-J rearrangements revealed that Igh(j) mice also have a different allele of DFL16.1 and apparently lack DFL16.2. Despite the existence of this new DSP gene, analysis of VDJ rearrangements from adult bone marrow pre-B cells of MRL/lpr mice still revealed the presence of complementarity-determining region 3 containing apparent D-D joinings in 4.6% of the sequences. C3H pre-B cells had 4.2% of sequences with apparent VDDJ rearrangements, and BALB/c pre-B cells had approximately 2%. DDJ intermediates were also observed, but at a lower frequency. However, strikingly, no VDDJ rearrangements were observed in newborn sequences, suggesting the process of assembly of VDJ rearrangements is fundamentally different in newborn mice vs adult mice.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11739512 DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.167.12.6933
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol ISSN: 0022-1767 Impact factor: 5.422