| Literature DB >> 26477367 |
Charlotte Proudhon1, Bingtao Hao1, Ramya Raviram1, Julie Chaumeil2, Jane A Skok3.
Abstract
Given their essential role in adaptive immunity, antigen receptor loci have been the focus of analysis for many years and are among a handful of the most well-studied genes in the genome. Their investigation led initially to a detailed knowledge of linear structure and characterization of regulatory elements that confer control of their rearrangement and expression. However, advances in DNA FISH and imaging combined with new molecular approaches that interrogate chromosome conformation have led to a growing appreciation that linear structure is only one aspect of gene regulation and in more recent years, the focus has switched to analyzing the impact of locus conformation and nuclear organization on control of recombination. Despite decades of work and intense effort from numerous labs, we are still left with an incomplete picture of how the assembly of antigen receptor loci is regulated. This chapter summarizes our advances to date and points to areas that need further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: ATM; Allelic exclusion; CTCF; Homologous pairing; Nuclear organization; Pericentromeric heterochromatin; RAG; V(D)J recombination
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26477367 PMCID: PMC4660984 DOI: 10.1016/bs.ai.2015.07.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Immunol ISSN: 0065-2776 Impact factor: 3.543