Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Molecular Immunology, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10065
2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10065
Abstract
The RAG recombinase (RAG1/2) plays an essential role in adaptive immunity by mediating V(D)J recombination in developing lymphocytes. In contrast, aberrant RAG1/2 activity promotes lymphocyte malignancies by causing chromosomal translocations and DNA deletions at cancer genes. RAG1/2 can also induce genomic DNA insertions by transposition and trans-V(D)J recombination, but only few such putative events have been documented in vivo. We used next-generation sequencing techniques to examine chromosomal rearrangements in primary murine B cells and discovered that RAG1/2 causes aberrant insertions by releasing cleaved antibody gene fragments that subsequently reintegrate into DNA breaks induced on a heterologous chromosome. We confirmed that RAG1/2 also mobilizes genomic DNA into independent physiological breaks by identifying similar insertions in human lymphoma and leukemia. Our findings reveal a novel RAG1/2-mediated insertion pathway distinct from DNA transposition and trans-V(D)J recombination that destabilizes the genome and shares features with reported oncogenic DNA insertions.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
German Academic Exchange Service
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
National Cancer Institute
St. Baldrick’s Foundation
St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital
Cancer Research UK
Bloodwise
Hungarian Scientific Research Fund
Publisher
Rockefeller University Press
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
17 articles.
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