Disparate roles of ATR and ATM in immunoglobulin class switch recombination and somatic hypermutation

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Abstract

Class switch recombination (CSR) and somatic hypermutation (SHM) are mechanistically related processes initiated by activation-induced cytidine deaminase. Here, we have studied the role of ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related protein (ATR) in CSR by analyzing the recombinational junctions, resulting from in vivo switching, in cells from patients with mutations in the ATR gene. The proportion of cells that have switched to immunoglobulin (Ig)A and IgG in the peripheral blood seems to be normal in ATR-deficient (ATRD) patients and the recombined S regions show a normal "blunt end-joining," but impaired end joining with partially complementary (1-3 bp) DNA ends. There was also an increased usage of microhomology at the μ-α switch junctions, but only up to 9 bp, suggesting that the endjoining pathway requiring longer microhomologies (>10 bp) may be ATR dependent. The SHM pattern in the Ig variable heavy chain genes is altered, with fewer mutations occurring at A and more mutations at T residues and thus a loss of strand bias in targeting A/T pairs within certain hotspots. These data suggest that the role of ATR is partially overlapping with that of ataxia telangiectasia-mutated protein, but that the former is also endowed with unique functional properties in the repair processes during CSR and SHM. JEM © The Rockefeller University Press.

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APA

Pan-Hammarström, Q., Lähdesmäki, A., Zhao, Y., Du, L., Zhao, Z., Wen, S., … Hammarström, L. (2006). Disparate roles of ATR and ATM in immunoglobulin class switch recombination and somatic hypermutation. Journal of Experimental Medicine, 203(1), 99–110. https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20050595

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