학술논문

B‐Cell Antigen Receptor: Assembly and Diversification
Document Type
Reference
Author
Source
eLS. :1-12
Subject
B‐lymphocytes
immunoglobulins
DNA recombination
gene diversification
somatic hypermutation
class switch recombination
DNA repair
Biochemistry
General & Introductory Life Sciences
Anatomy and Physiology
Cell and Molecular Biology
Biology
Developmental
Microbiology and Virology
Plant Science
Genetics
Proteomics
Bioinformatics
Neuroscience
Ecology
Immunology
Molecular Biology
Acquired (Adaptive) Immunity
Antibodies
Antigens
Cells of the Immune System
DNA Damage and Repair
Language
English
Abstract
Immunoglobulin (Ig) genes of mammalian B cells undergo two processes that diversify their genomic sequence and structure. The first one concerns the BCR assembly that is achieved through a combinatorial rearrangement of a large number of V, D and J gene segments. This process is essential for B‐cell development and occurs during early B‐cell differentiation in the bone marrow without antigenic challenge. The second process includes somatic hypermutation (SHM), and class switch recombination (CSR), start when the B cell encounters an antigen at the periphery. While the two processes share the action of ubiquitous DNA repair factors to carry out all the steps necessary for creating recombination and mutations in genomic DNA, they are initiated by different lymphoid‐specific factors. On one hand, the action of recombination activating genes 1 and 2 (RAG1 and RAG2) is required for the V(D) J rearrangements and, on the other hand, the action of activation‐induced cytidine deaminase (AID) for both SHM and CSR. The ultimate goal of these diversification mechanisms is to create a dynamic and robust immune response. Key Concepts V(D)J recombination is a programmed that generates B‐ and T‐cell receptors in vertebrates (BCR and TCR). V(D)J recombination requires precise cutting of the DNA at recombination signal sequences (RSS) followed by rejoining of the resulting termini. Imprecisions during the ends‐joining reaction contribute significantly to increasing the variability of the resulting functional BCR and TCR. RAG1, RAG2 and TdT are the three lymphoid‐specific factors needed for V(D)J recombination and for the junctional diversity observed during lymphoid development. B‐cells provide the antibody‐mediated immune response (humoral immunity). It can generate antibodies to an immense variety of pathogenic antigens. Somatic hypermutation (SHM) and class switch recombination (CSR) occur only in germinal centre B cells. During SHM, DNA repair mechanisms are diverted from their canonical role in preserving genomic integrity to permit high rate of mutations. SHM and CSR both occur in germinal centre in secondary lymphoid tissues and require activation‐induced cytidine deaminase (AID). AID deaminates deoxy‐cytosine on single‐stranded DNA. Ten–eleven translocation (TET) proteins (mainly TET2et TET3) are key regulators of immunoglobulin light chain rearrangement, class switch recombination and plasma cell differentiation.

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