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Publication : Mechanisms that generate junctional diversity in alpha and delta chains that use the Tcrd-V3 gene product.

First Author  Holman PO Year  1992
Journal  Immunogenetics Volume  35
Issue  1 Pages  33-40
PubMed ID  1309508 Mgi Jnum  J:1981
Mgi Id  MGI:50505 Doi  10.1007/BF00216624
Citation  Holman PO, et al. (1992) Mechanisms that generate junctional diversity in alpha and delta chains that use the Tcrd-V3 gene product. Immunogenetics 35(1):33-40
abstractText  The signals that dictate whether a thymocyte will express the alpha beta or gamma delta T-cell receptors are unknown. Although it is also not known if these two different cell types use identical recombinational machinery during rearrangement, the same variable (V) region genes can be used by both alpha and delta chains. By examining the products of rearrangements in alpha beta or gamma delta thymocytes that express identical V genes, we hoped to determine whether these cell types might differ in particular aspects of their recombinational activity. The polymerase chain reaction was used to show that the Tcrd-V2, Tcrd-V3, and Tcra-V3 genes are expressed as both Tcra and Tcrd transcripts in fetal and adult BALB/c mice. Sequencing of V delta 3 isolates was performed in order to compare the contribution of various mechanisms to the generation of junctional diversity. Extensive junctional diversity was present at all stages of development examined (fetal, newborn, and adult). During early development both alpha and delta chain junctional diversity is generated primarily by variability in the position of joining two gene segments (i.e., Tcrd-V3 to Tcra-J in alpha chains; Tcrd-V3 to Tcrd-D2 and Tcrd-D2 to Tcrd-J1 in delta chains). The pattern of base pair deletion from the end of the Tcrd-V3 gene was identical in alpha and delta chains and deletions occurred in fetal as well as adult T cells. In later development T cells use not only this mechanism for alpha and delta chains but also the addition of bases at gene segment junctions, presumably through the action of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT). Finally, a comparison of the variable domains of these alpha and delta chains shows that a notable difference is the variability in length of the CDR 3 region which can be significantly longer in delta-chains than in alpha-chains.
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