Ki67 deficiency impedes chromatin accessibility and BCR gene rearrangement

Author:

Ding Zhoujie1ORCID,Hagan Maree2ORCID,Yan Feng3ORCID,Schroer Nick W.Y.1ORCID,Polmear Jack45ORCID,Good-Jacobson Kim L.45ORCID,Dvorscek Alexandra R.1ORCID,Pitt Catherine1ORCID,O’Donnell Kristy1ORCID,Nutt Stephen L.67ORCID,Zotos Dimitra1ORCID,McKenzie Craig1ORCID,Hill Danika L.1ORCID,Robinson Marcus J.1ORCID,Quast Isaak1ORCID,Koentgen Frank2ORCID,Tarlinton David M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Central Clinical School, Monash University 1 Department of Immunology, , Melbourne, Australia

2. Ozgene Pty Ltd. 2 , Bentley, Australia

3. Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research 3 Bioinformatics Division, , Parkville, Australia

4. Monash University 4 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, , Clayton, Australia

5. Immunity Program, Biomedicine Discovery Institute, Monash University 5 , Clayton, Australia

6. Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research 6 Immunology Division, , Parkville, Australia

7. University of Melbourne 7 Department of Medical Biology, , Parkville, Australia

Abstract

The proliferation marker Ki67 has been attributed critical functions in maintaining mitotic chromosome morphology and heterochromatin organization during the cell cycle, indicating a potential role in developmental processes requiring rigid cell-cycle control. Here, we discovered that despite normal fecundity and organogenesis, germline deficiency in Ki67 resulted in substantial defects specifically in peripheral B and T lymphocytes. This was not due to impaired cell proliferation but rather to early lymphopoiesis at specific stages where antigen–receptor gene rearrangements occurred. We identified that Ki67 was required for normal global chromatin accessibility involving regulatory regions of genes critical for checkpoint stages in B cell lymphopoiesis. In line with this, mRNA expression of Rag1 was diminished and gene rearrangement was less efficient in the absence of Ki67. Transgenes encoding productively rearranged immunoglobulin heavy and light chains complemented Ki67 deficiency, completely rescuing early B cell development. Collectively, these results identify a unique contribution from Ki67 to somatic antigen–receptor gene rearrangement during lymphopoiesis.

Funder

MASSIVE

Nectar

Swedish Research Council

Monash University

National Health and Medical Research Council

Cancer Council Victoria

Swiss National Science Foundation

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Reference43 articles.

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