Literature DB >> 9190934

The human heavy chain Ig V region gene repertoire is biased at all stages of B cell ontogeny, including early pre-B cells.

P Kraj1, S P Rao, A M Glas, R R Hardy, E C Milner, L E Silberstein.   

Abstract

The expressed human Ig repertoire is not an equal representation of all V(H) segments present in genomic DNA. Studies have shown that a restricted set of V(H) gene segments are over-represented in Ab repertoires of fetal/neonatal and adult B cells. Additionally, this restricted set of V(H) genes is frequently expressed by autoimmune and tumor B cells. To investigate at which developmental stage a bias in the repertoire begins, we compared the V(H)3 and V(H)4 family repertoires of pre-B and immature B cells from bone marrow and mature B cells from peripheral blood of two adults. We found that the V4-34 and V4-59 gene segments of the V(H)4 family and the V3-23 gene segment of the V(H)3 family dominate the repertoires of the surface Ig-negative early pre-B as well as immature and mature B cells. Furthermore, the pattern of utilization of other V(H)3 family members suggests that certain genes that are frequently rearranged during early stages of B cell development are subsequently disfavored during later stages of B cell maturation. We conclude that the over-representation of certain V genes could arise from sequential mechanisms operating at both early and later stages of B cell development. These V(H)-mediated mechanisms might include preferential rearrangement and/or efficiency of pairing with the surrogate light chain at the surface Ig-negative, early pre-B cell stage and ligand selection at more mature, surface Ig-positive, B cell stages.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9190934

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  26 in total

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