In mammals, VDJ recombination is responsible for the establishment of a highly diversified preimmune antibody repertoire. Acquisition of a functional Ig heavy (H) chain variable (V) gene rearrangement is thought to prevent further recombination at the IgH locus. Here, we describe VHQ52NT; Vκgr32NT Ig monoclonal mice reprogrammed from the nucleus of an intestinal IgA+ plasma cell. In VHQ52NT mice, IgA replaced IgM to drive early B-cell development and peripheral B-cell maturation. In VHQ52NT animals, over 20% of mature B cells disrupted the single productive, nonautoimmune IgH rearrangement through VH replacement and exchanged it with a highly diversified pool of IgH specificities. VH replacement occurred in early pro-B cells, was independent of pre-B-cell receptor signaling, and involved predominantly one adjacent VH germ-line gene. VH replacement was also identified in 5% of peripheral B cells of mice inheriting a different productive VH rearrangement expressed in the form of an IgM H chain. In summary, editing of a productive IgH rearrangement through VH replacement can account for up to 20% of the IgH repertoire expressed by mature B cells.
CITATION STYLE
Kumar, R., Bach, M. P., Mainoldi, F., Maruya, M., Kishigami, S., Jumaa, H., … Casola, S. (2015). Antibody repertoire diversification through VH gene replacement in mice cloned from an IgA plasma cell. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 112(5), E450–E457. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1417988112
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