Literature DB >> 3126251

The kappa-deleting element. Germline and rearranged, duplicated and dispersed forms.

W B Graninger1, P L Goldman, C C Morton, S J O'Brien, S J Korsmeyer.   

Abstract

Human light chain genes are used in a kappa before lambda order. Accompanying this hierarchy is the rearrangement of a kappa-deleting element (Kde) which eliminates the kappa locus before lambda gene rearrangement. In approximately 60% of rearrangements the Kde recombines at a conserved heptamer within the J kappa-C kappa intron. We demonstrated that aberrant V/J rearrangements possessing apparent "N" nucleotides existed 5' to the J kappa-Kde rearrangements. This suggests that the Kde may selectively eliminate nonfunctional V/J alleles. A kappa-producing cell that displayed the unusual finding of lambda gene rearrangement demonstrated a rearranged Kde. This rearrangement was a V kappa/Kde recombination and the heptamer-11 bp spacer-nonamer flanking the V kappa is the target site of the Kde 40% of the time. The mouse possesses a counterpart to the Kde (recombining sequence [RS]) and the highly conserved regions surround the heptamer-spacer-nonamer signals. No complete protein product was predicted from the germline Kde near its break-point and no consistent fusion product was predicted from either the V/Kde or V/J-Kde rearrangements. A distal portion of the Kde is duplicated and is present at 2q11 as well as 2p11. The evolutionary conservation of the kappa-elimination event, the duplication and maintenance of the Kde indicates that it has a function. A portion of the Kde may still prove to encode a trans-acting factor that directly affects lambda rearrangement. A certain role for the Kde is its site-specific rearrangement, which destroys ineffective kappa genes and sets the stage for lambda gene utilization.

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Year:  1988        PMID: 3126251      PMCID: PMC2188845          DOI: 10.1084/jem.167.2.488

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Med        ISSN: 0022-1007            Impact factor:   14.307


  20 in total

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3.  Dispersion of the ras family of transforming genes to four different chromosomes in man.

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Authors:  D M Persiani; J Durdik; E Selsing
Journal:  J Exp Med       Date:  1987-06-01       Impact factor: 14.307

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6.  DNA sequencing with chain-terminating inhibitors.

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7.  Human immunoglobulin kappa light-chain genes are deleted or rearranged in lambda-producing B cells.

Authors:  P A Hieter; S J Korsmeyer; T A Waldmann; P Leder
Journal:  Nature       Date:  1981-04-02       Impact factor: 49.962

8.  Developmental hierarchy of immunoglobulin gene rearrangements in human leukemic pre-B-cells.

Authors:  S J Korsmeyer; P A Hieter; J V Ravetch; D G Poplack; T A Waldmann; P Leder
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Authors:  F W Alt; V Enea; A L Bothwell; D Baltimore
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Authors:  S J Korsmeyer; P A Hieter; S O Sharrow; C K Goldman; P Leder; T A Waldmann
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  19 in total

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Review 3.  Mouse chromosome 6.

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8.  Detection of clonal B cell populations in paraffin-embedded tissues by polymerase chain reaction.

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10.  Conserved cryptic recombination signals in Vkappa gene segments are cleaved in small pre-B cells.

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