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Publication : The role of rearrangement at the second Ig heavy chain locus in maintaining B cell tolerance to DNA.

First Author  Liu Y Year  2008
Journal  J Immunol Volume  180
Issue  11 Pages  7721-7
PubMed ID  18490776 Mgi Jnum  J:136378
Mgi Id  MGI:3796047 Doi  10.4049/jimmunol.180.11.7721
Citation  Liu Y, et al. (2008) The role of rearrangement at the second Ig heavy chain locus in maintaining B cell tolerance to DNA. J Immunol 180(11):7721-7
abstractText  In recently generated B6.56R anti-DNA autoantibody-transgenic mice, it was noted that a substantial fraction of the B cells that had avoided DNA reactivity had done so through the rearrangement and usage of the endogenous, nontargeted H chain (HC) allele. This suggested that rearrangement at the second HC locus might be an important mechanism through which self-reactive B cells might successfully revise their initial Ag specificity. To test the importance of this mechanism in B cell tolerance, we generated B6.56R/56R mice that possessed the 56R anti-DNA H chain transgene inserted into both HC loci. These transgenic homozygotes developed higher titers of anti-DNA Abs, with an expanded population of B220(low)MHC class II(low) B cells, enriched for CD21(low)CD23(low) preplasmablasts. The analysis of hybridomas from these mice revealed that the only avenue by which these B cells could avoid DNA reactivity was through the use of the editor L chains, V(k)20 or V(k)21. Hence, in addition to LC editing, rearrangement and usage of the second HC locus/allele constitutes an important safety valve for B cells the primary BCR of which confers DNA reactivity. In contrast to these tolerance mechanisms, editing the first rearranged HC locus (through HC replacement) and somatic mutations appear to be less frequently used to edit/revise self-reactive B cells.
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