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Publication : Antibody diversity: somatic hypermutation of rearranged VH genes.

First Author  Kim S Year  1981
Journal  Cell Volume  27
Issue  3 Pt 2 Pages  573-81
PubMed ID  6101208 Mgi Jnum  J:11961
Mgi Id  MGI:60228 Doi  10.1016/0092-8674(81)90399-8
Citation  Kim S, et al. (1981) Antibody diversity: somatic hypermutation of rearranged VH genes. Cell 27(3 Pt 2):573-81
abstractText  The immune response to phosphorylcholine in BALB/c mice has been well characterized. Amino acid sequence analyses of heavy-chain variable (VH) regions from 19 myeloma and hybridoma immunoglobulins binding phosphorylcholine show that 10 are identical (the prototype T15 VH sequence) and 9 are distinct variants differing by one to eight residues. A T15 VH DNA probe was used to isolate four closely related members of the T15 VH gene family, including one encoding the T15 VH sequence, from a sperm genomic library. A comparison of the protein and germline VH sequences suggested that most of the immune response to phosphorylcholine is derived from the T15 germline VH gene segment. The variant heavy chains from the M167 and M603 alpha immunoglobulins differ in their VH protein sequences from T15 by eight and three residues, respectively. We analyzed the somatic variability in and around the coding regions of these two variant VH genes by comparing them with the corresponding regions of the appropriate germline gene segments. The somatic variation has three properties: it is extensive and is found in flanking as well as coding sequences (for example, at least 44 substitutions for the M167 sequence and 10 substitutions for the M603 sequence); in the coding regions, it includes many silent as well as replacement substitutions; and it is focal in nature and centered around the rearranged VH genes. Although the mutations extend into the neighboring upstream and downstream flanking sequences, sequences approximately 5 kb upstream and downstream from the VH genes show no substitutions. Moreover, the associated heavy-chain constant genes (C alpha) from both variant alpha genes are unaltered, indicating that a closely linked and coexpressed gene is unmutated. We conclude that this somatic variation is generated by a special hypermutational mechanism highly localized in its site of execution and highly restricted in its time of operation during B-cell development.
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