V gene rearrangement is required to fully activate the hypermutation mechanism in B cells.

  • Roes J
  • Hüppi K
  • Rajewsky K
  • et al.
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Abstract

Nonproductively rearranged H and L chain loci of B cell hybridoma lines expressing heavily mutated antibodies were cloned and partially sequenced. The results confirm earlier data showing that somatic point mutations are as frequent in nonproductively rearranged loci containing a rearranged V gene as in productively rearranged loci. They establish in addition that in nonproductive H chain loci which bear a DJH rearrangement the frequency of somatic mutations is more than 10 times lower (0.2%) than in VDJH loci expressed by the same cells (2.5%). Thus, the hypermutation mechanism operating in B cell differentiation is targeted at V genes rearranged to the J locus and may require nucleotide sequences associated with both V and J elements in order to be fully activated. An inversion of the JH2 segment was detected in one DJH locus. This inversion appears to be the result of a secondary joining event occurring occasionally in the course of B cell development.

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APA

Roes, J., Hüppi, K., Rajewsky, K., & Sablitzky, F. (1989). V gene rearrangement is required to fully activate the hypermutation mechanism in B cells. The Journal of Immunology, 142(3), 1022–1026. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.142.3.1022

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