| Literature DB >> 7723773 |
Abstract
Both the membrane-associated and -secreted Ig proteins are encoded by a single gene whose primary transcript is alternatively processed at its 3' end. The relative use of the alternative processing pathways is regulated during B cell maturation. This alternative RNA processing involves two competing reactions, splicing from the last constant region exon to the membrane exon(s) and cleavage-polyadenylation at the secretory-specific poly(A) site. Studies with the IgM-encoding mu gene have shown that cell-specific regulation requires that the efficiencies of these two reactions be balanced; any gene modifications that substantially improve or reduce the efficiency of either reaction also abrogate the regulatory shift in alternative processing pathways. All of the Ig isotypes that undergo a membrane-to-secreted switch during B cell maturation have a similar gene structure, thus suggesting that they might all be regulated by the same mechanism. We show that RNA processing of chimeric mu alpha genes containing modifications in the C alpha 3 exon size and the C alpha 3-alpha m intron size respond to these modifications as predicted by previous mu gene studies. In addition, RNA expression ratios from the chimeric mu alpha genes are regulated in B cells and plasma cells. This provides good evidence that splicing and cleavage-polyadenylation in the alpha gene are balanced reactions that are regulated in the same way as in the mu gene.Entities:
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Year: 1995 PMID: 7723773 DOI: 10.1016/0161-5890(94)00141-m
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Immunol ISSN: 0161-5890 Impact factor: 4.407