4.6 Article

IgH 3' regulatory region increases ectopic class switch recombination

Journal

PLOS GENETICS
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1009288

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Agence nationale de la recherche grant [16-CE15-0019-01]
  2. Fondation pour la recherche sur le cancer grant [PGA1 RF20180207070]
  3. ALURAD
  4. FEDER European grant

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The study investigates how DNA lesions inflicted by activation-induced deaminase (AID) differentially result in reshaping immunoglobulin genes in mature B-cells. It reveals that the 3'Regulatory Region (3'RR) plays a crucial role in promoting class switch recombination (CSR) at the IgH locus.
DNA lesions inflicted by activation-induced deaminase (AID) instrumentally initiate the processes reshaping immunoglobulin genes in mature B-cells, from local somatic hypermutation (SHM) to junctions of distant breaks during class switch recombination (CSR). It remains incompletely understood how these divergent outcomes of AID attacks are differentially and temporally focused, with CSR strictly occurring in the Ig heavy chain (IgH) locus while SHM concentrates on rearranged V(D)J regions in the IgH and Ig light chain loci. In the IgH locus, disruption of either the 3'Regulatory Region (3'RR) super-enhancer or of switch (S) regions preceding constant genes, profoundly affects CSR. Reciprocally, we now examined if these elements are sufficient to induce CSR in a synthetic locus based on the Ig kappa locus backbone. Addition of a surrogate core 3'RR (c3'RR) and of a pair of transcribed and spliced Switch regions, together with a reporter system for kappa-CSR yielded a switchable Ig kappa locus. While the c3'RR stimulated SHM at S regions, it also lowered the local SHM threshold necessary for switch recombination to occur. The 3'RR thus both helps recruit AID to initiate DNA lesions, but then also promotes their resolution through long-distance synapses and recombination following double-strand breaks. Author summary Class switching allows B lymphocytes to replace expression of immunoglobin M with that of immunoglobulins G, A or E. The genetic support of class switching, is a unique and large deletion uniquely occuring within the immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) locus. This recombination is triggered after DNA lesions inflicted by the activation-induced deaminase (AID) enzyme. In immunoglobulin light chain loci, AID only stimulates somatic hypermutation. In such a non-IgH locus, we now show that the IgH 3' superenhancer can promote junctions between distant DNA breaks and ectopic class switch recombination. This study identifies the minimal elements necessary for class-switch recombination to occur instead of hypermutation in a locus targeted by AID, i.e. transcribed (and spliced) target sites for AID in so-called S regions, and the 3'IgH superenhancer which both helps recruit AID for DNA lesions, and helps repair these lesions through distant gene synapsis and recombination.

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