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Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes chain chain (n= ~85) H chain (n= ~134)
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Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes chain chain (n= ~85) H chain (n= ~134)

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes chain  chain (n= ~85) H chain (n= ~134)

Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes

chain

chain (n= ~85)

H chain (n= ~134)

Page 2: Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes chain  chain (n= ~85) H chain (n= ~134)

Unique features of Ig genes (1)

- Vertebrates can respond to a limitless array of foreign proteins.

- Every Ab molecule contains a unique a.a.sequence in its V region, but only one of a limited number of invariable sequences in its C region.

- Germ-line DNA contains multiple gene segments encode portions of a single Ig H or L chain.

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Unique features of Ig genes (2)

- The Ig gene segments carried in the germ cells can’t be transcribed & translated into H & L chains until they are rearranged into functional genes.

- During B-cell maturation in the bone marrow, Ig gene segments are rearranged and generated into more than 1010 combinations of V region.

- Each B cell has a unique combination and is antigenically committed to a specific epitope.

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Unique features of Ig genes (3)

- Mature B cells no longer contain identical chromosomal DNA to germ-line DNA.

- After antigenic stimulation, further rearrangement of C-region gene segments can generate changes in isotypes without changing the specificity of Ig. - Genomic rearrangement is an essential feature of lymphocyte differentiation, and no other vertebrate cell type has been shown to undergo this process.

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本章大綱 :• Genetic model compatible with Ig structure• Multigene organization of Ig genes• V-region gene rearrangements• Mechanism of V-region DNA rearrangements• Generation of Ab diversity• Class switching among C-region genes• Expression of Ig genes• Regulation of Ig-gene transcription• Ab genes and Ab engineering

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Genetic Model Compatible with Ig Structure

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• The vast diversity of antibody specificities

• The presence in Ig heavy and light chains of a variable region at the amino-terminal end and a constant region at the carboxyl-terminal end

• The existence of isotypes with the same antigenic specificity.

Page 9: Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes chain  chain (n= ~85) H chain (n= ~134)

Germ-line theory: The genome contributed by the germ cells, egg and sperm, contains a large repertoire of Ig genes.

Somatic-variation theory:

The genome contains a small number of Ig genes, from which a large number of Ab specificities are generated in the somatic cells by mutation or recombination.

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- How could stability be maintained in the C region while some kind of diversifying mechanism generated the V region?

- There must be mechanisms not only for generating Ab diversity but also for maintaining constancy.

- Neither the germ-line nor the somatic variation theory could offer a reasonable explanation of the central feature of Ig structure.

Page 11: Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes chain  chain (n= ~85) H chain (n= ~134)

The Two-gene model of Dryer and Bennett (1965)

Two separate genes encode a single Ig H or L chain, one gene for the V region and the other for the C region.

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The suggestion that two genes encoded a single polypeptide contradicted the existing one gene-one polypeptide principle and was without precedent in any known biological system.

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Verification of the Dryer and Bennet Hypothesis (by Tonegawa and Hozumi, 1976)

First direct evidence that separate genes encode the V and C regions of Ig and that the genes are rearranged in the course of B-cell differentiation.

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Southern blot

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Multigene organization of Ig genes

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-Chain Multigene Family

V region: 2 VV gene segments 3 JJgene segments(13 aa)C region: 3 CCgene segments –1, 2, 3 subtypes (mouse)

In humans: 30 VV, 4 JJ and 4 CC segments

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-Chain Multigene Family

V region: 85 VV gene segments 4 JJgene segmentsC region: 1 CCgene segments (mouse)

In humans: 40 VV, 5 JJ and 1 CC segments

Page 22: Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes chain  chain (n= ~85) H chain (n= ~134)

-Chain Multigene Family

V region: 134 VV gene segments 13 DDHH gene segments 4 JJHHgene segmentsC region: 8 CCgene segments (mouse)

In humans: 51 VV, 27 DDHH, 6 JJ and 9 CC segments

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V-region gene rearrangements

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V Region gene rearrangements

- The H-chain V-region genes rearrange first, then the L-chain V-region genes.

- The rearrangements are random events

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1st rearrangement

2nd rearrangement

A mature , immunocompetentB cell expresses both IgM & IgD with identical antigenic specificity on its surface.

51 26 6

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Mechanism of V-region DNA rearrangements

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Two unique recombination signal sequences (RSSs) flanking each germ-line V, D, and J gene segment

One-turn RSS: located at 3’ to each V5’ to each Jand both sides of each DH gene segment

Two-turn RSS: located at 3’ to each V & VH and 5’ to each J & JH gene segment

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Recombination Signal Sequences (RSS)

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One turn/two-turn joining rule

- Signal sequences having a one-turn spacer (12 bp) can join only with sequences having a two-turn spacer (23 bp) (one-turn/two turn joining rule).

- This joining rule ensures that a VL segment joins only to a JL segment and not to another VL segment. - The rule likewise ensures that VH, DH, and JH segments join in proper order and that segments of the same type do not join each other.

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Enzymatic Joining of Gene Segments

Recombination-Activating Genes: RAG-1, RAG-2 - mediate V-(D)-J joining

TdT: terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase

DSBR: double strand break repair enzymes

Page 32: Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes chain  chain (n= ~85) H chain (n= ~134)

TdT:Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase

DSBR:Double Strand Break Repair

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Deletional joining (coding joint): -two gene segments are in the same transcriptional orientation

Inversional joining (signal joint):- two gene segments have opposite orientation

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deletion of the signal joint and intervening DNA as a circular excision product

retention of both the coding joint and the signal joint (and inter-vening DNA) on the chromosome

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<15 nt

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Homework:

If a mouse has a defect on RAG-1 or 2 , what will happen?

If you knock out TdT or DSBR enzyme from a mouse, what will happen?

Page 41: Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes chain  chain (n= ~85) H chain (n= ~134)

Imprecise Joining

- productive and nonproductive rearrangements

- productive rearrangement in one allele is enough

- If rearrangement is not produced, the B cell dies by apoptosis.

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Allelic Exclusion

A single B cell is only specific for a single epitope !!!

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Generation of Ab diversity

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Antibody Diversity

Seven means of generation of Ab diversity:

1. Multiple germ-line V, D, and J gene segments 2. Combinatorial V-(D)-J joining 3. Junctional flexibility 4. P-region nucleotide addition (P-addition) 5. N-region nucleotide addition (N-addition) 6. Somatic hypermutation 7. Combinatorial association of light and heavy chains

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Junctional Flexibility

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- Up to 15 N-nucleotides can be added to both the DH-JH and VH-DHJH joints.

- Thus, a complete H-chain V region is encoded by a VHNDHNJH unit.

- N regions appears to consist of wholly random sequences

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Somatic Hypermutation

- Somatic hypermutation occurs only within germinal germinal centerscenters, structures that form in secondary lymphoid organs within a week or so of immunization with an Ag that activates a T-cell-dependent B-cell response.

- Somatic hypermutation occurs at a frequency approaching 10-3/bp/generation.

- This rate is at least 100,000s-fold higher than the spontaneous mutation rate, about 10-8/bp/peneration, in other genes.

- B cells with higher-affinity Ig receptors will be preferentially selected for survival because of their greater ability to bind to the Ag. ----- Affinity MaturationAffinity Maturation

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A Lymph Node

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The Spleen

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Peyer’s Patch

Page 59: Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes chain  chain (n= ~85) H chain (n= ~134)

Antibody Diversity

Seven means of generation of Ab diversity:

1. Multiple germ-line V, D, and J gene segments 2. Combinatorial V-(D)-J joining 3. Junctional flexibility 4. P-region nucleotide addition (P-addition) 5. N-region nucleotide addition (N-addition) 6. Somatic hypermutation – after Ag stimulation 7. Combinatorial association of light and heavy chains

Page 60: Chapter 5 Organization and Expression of Ig Genes chain  chain (n= ~85) H chain (n= ~134)

Class Switching Among C-Region Genes

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Class (isotype) switching

- Class-specific recombinase proteins may bind to switch regionsswitch regions and facilitate DNA recombination.

- Cytokines secreted by activated TH cells have been shown to induce B cells to class switch to a particular isotype.

- IL-4 induces C to C1 or C (Chapter 11)

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Expression of Ig Genes

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Regulation of Ig-Gene Transcription

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