4.8 Article

Ubiquitylated PCNA plays a role in somatic hypermutation and class-switch recombination and is required for meiotic progression

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0808182105

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Education and Science [EX-2006-0732]
  2. Medical Scientist Training Program [T32GM007288]
  3. National Institutes of Health [CA72649, CA102705, CA76329, CA93484, AG028872, P01-G027734]
  4. National Women's Division
  5. Seaver Foundation Center for Bioinformatics
  6. Albert Einstein College of Medicine

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Somatic hypermutation (SHM) and class-switch recombination (CSR) of Ig genes are dependent upon activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID)-induced mutations. The scaffolding properties of proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and ubiquitylation of its residue K164 have been suggested to play an important role organizing the error-prone repair events that contribute to the AID-induced diversification of the Ig locus. We generated knockout mice for PCNA (Pcna(-/-)), which were embryonic lethal. Expression of PCNA with the K164R mutation rescued the lethal phenotype, but the mice (Pcna(-/-)tg(K164R)) displayed a meiotic defect in early pachynema and were sterile. B cells proliferated normally in Pcna(-/-)tg(K164R) mice, but a PCNA-K164R mutation resulted in impaired ex vivo CSR to IgG1 and IgG3, which was associated with reduced mutation frequency at the switch regions and a bias toward blunt junctions. Analysis of the heavy chain V186.2 region after NP-immunization showed in Pcna(-/-)tgK(164R) mice a significant reduction in the mutation frequency of A:T residues in WA motifs preferred by polymerase-eta (Pol eta), and a strand-biased increase in the mutation frequency of G residues, preferentially in the context of AID-targeted GYW motifs. The phenotype of Pcna(-/-)tg(K164R) mice supports the idea that ubiquitylation of PCNA participates directly in the meiotic process and the diversification of the Ig locus through class-switch recombination (CSR) and somatic hypermutation (SHM).

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available