Affiliation:
1. Helmholtz Center Munich, German Research Center for Environmental Health, Institute for Molecular RadiobiologyIngolstädter Landstrasse 1, 85764 Neuherberg, Germany
Abstract
Depending on the species and the developmental stage of B cells, activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) triggers
immunoglobulin
(
Ig
) gene diversification by gene conversion, hypermutation or switch recombination. The bursal B cell line DT40 usually diversifies its rearranged
Ig light chain
(
IgL
) gene by gene conversion, but disruption of the
RAD51
gene paralogues or deletion of the
ψV
conversion donors induces hypermutation. Although not all aspects of somatic hypermutation can be studied in DT40, the compact size of the chicken
IgL
locus and the ability to modify the genome by targeted integration are powerful experimental advantages. We review here how the studies in DT40 contributed to understanding how AID initiates
Ig
gene diversification and how AID-induced uracils are subsequently processed by uracil DNA glycosylase, proliferating cell nuclear antigens and error-prone polymerases. We also discuss the on-going research on the
Ig
locus specificity of hypermutation and the possibility of using hypermutation for the artificial evolution of proteins and regulatory sequences in DT40.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cited by
27 articles.
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