The Role of Germline Promoters and I Exons in Cytokine-Induced Gene-Specific Class Switch Recombination

  • Dunnick W
  • Shi J
  • Holden V
  • et al.
10Citations
Citations of this article
31Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Germline transcription precedes class switch recombination (CSR). The promoter regions and I exons of these germline transcripts include binding sites for activation- and cytokine-induced transcription factors, and the promoter regions/I exons are essential for CSR. Therefore, it is a strong hypothesis that the promoter/I exons regions are responsible for much of cytokine-regulated, gene-specific CSR. We tested this hypothesis by swapping the germline promoter and I exons for the murine γ1 and γ2a H chain genes in a transgene of the entire H chain C-region locus. We found that the promoter/I exon for γ1 germline transcripts can direct robust IL-4–induced recombination to the γ2a gene. In contrast, the promoter/I exon for the γ2a germline transcripts works poorly in the context of the γ1 H chain gene, resulting in expression of γ1 H chains that is <1% the wild-type level. Nevertheless, the small amount of recombination to the chimeric γ1 gene is induced by IFN-γ. These results suggest that cytokine regulation of CSR, but not the magnitude of CSR, is regulated by the promoter/I exons.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Dunnick, W. A., Shi, J., Holden, V., Fontaine, C., & Collins, J. T. (2011). The Role of Germline Promoters and I Exons in Cytokine-Induced Gene-Specific Class Switch Recombination. The Journal of Immunology, 186(1), 350–358. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1003108

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free