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Nature Research, Nature Immunology, 7(8), p. 715-722, 2007

DOI: 10.1038/ni1476

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Allelic 'choice' governs somatic hypermutation in vivo at the immunoglobulin κ-chain locus

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Monoallelic demethylation and rearrangement control allelic exclusion of the immunoglobulin kappa-chain locus (Igk locus) in B cells. Here, through the introduction of pre-rearranged Igk genes into their physiological position, the critical rearrangement step was bypassed, thereby generating mice producing B cells simultaneously expressing two different immunoglobulin-kappa light chains. Such 'double-expressing' B cells still underwent monoallelic demethylation at the Igk locus, and the demethylated allele was the 'preferred' substrate for somatic hypermutation in each cell. However, methylation itself did not directly inhibit the activation-induced cytidine-deaminase reaction in vitro. Thus, it seems that the epigenetic mechanisms that initially bring about monoallelic variable-(diversity)-joining rearrangement continue to be involved in the control of antibody diversity at later stages of B cell development.