Author:
Mostoslavsky Raul,Singh Nandita,Kirillov Andrei,Pelanda Roberta,Cedar Howard,Chess Andrew,Bergman Yehudit
Abstract
Allelic exclusion in κ light-chain synthesis is thought to result from a feedback mechanism by which the expression of a functional κ light chain on the surface of the B cell leads to an intracellular signal that down-regulates the V(D)J recombinase, thus precluding rearrangement of the other allele. Whereas such a feedback mechanism clearly plays a role in the maintenance of allelic exclusion, here we provide evidence suggesting that the initial establishment of allelic exclusion involves differential availability of the two κ alleles for rearrangement. Analysis of κ+ B-cell populations and of individual κ+ B cells that have rearranged only one allele demonstrates that in these cells, critical sites on the rearranged allele are unmethylated, whereas the nonrearranged allele remains methylated. This pattern is apparently generated by demethylation that is initiated at the small pre-B cell stage, on a single allele, in a process that occurs prior to rearrangement and requires the presence in cis of both the intronic and 3′ κ enhancers. Taken together with data demonstrating that undermethylation is required for rearrangement, these results indicate that demethylation may actually underly the process of allelic exclusion by directing the initial choice of a single κ allele for rearrangement.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Subject
Developmental Biology,Genetics
Cited by
182 articles.
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