The IgH locus 3' cis-regulatory super-enhancer co-opts AID for allelic transvection

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Abstract

Immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) alleles have ambivalent relationships: they feature both allelic exclusion, ensuring monoallelic expression of a single immunoglobulin (Ig) allele, and frequent inter-allelic class-switch recombination (CSR) reassembling genes from both alleles. The IgH locus 3' regulatory region (3'RR) includes several transcriptional cis-enhancers promoting activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID)-dependent somatic hypermutation (SHM) and CSR, and altogether behaves as a strong super-enhancer. It can also promote deregulated expression of translocated oncogenes during lymphomagenesis. Besides these rare, illegitimate and pathogenic interactions, we now show that under physiological conditions, the 3'RR super-enhancer supports not only legitimate cis-, but also trans-recruitment of AID, contributing to IgH inter-allelic proximity and enabling the super-enhancer on one allele to stimulate biallelic SHM and CSR. Such inter-allelic activating interactions define transvection, a phenomenon well-known in drosophila but rarely observed in mammalian cells, now appearing as a unique feature of the IgH 3'RR super-enhancer.

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APA

Le Noir, S., Laffleur, B., Carrion, C., Garot, A., Lecardeur, S., Pinaud, E., … Cogné, M. (2017). The IgH locus 3’ cis-regulatory super-enhancer co-opts AID for allelic transvection. Oncotarget, 8(8), 12929–12940. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.14585

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