Review
Nature Reviews Immunology 3, 890-899 (November 2003) | doi:10.1038/nri1225
Regulating antigen-receptor gene assembly
Mark S. Schlissel1 About the author
Abstract
The genes encoding antigen receptors are unique because of their high diversity and their assembly in developing lymphocytes from gene segments through a series of site-specific DNA recombination reactions known as V(D)J rearrangement. This review focuses on our understanding of how recombination of immunoglobulin and T-cell receptor gene segments is tightly regulated despite being catalysed by a common lymphoid recombinase, which recognizes a widely distributed conserved recombination signal sequence. Probable mechanisms involve precise expression of the lymphoid-restricted recombination-activating genes RAG1 and RAG2, and developmentally regulated epigenetic alterations in template accessibility, which are targeted by transcriptional regulatory elements and involve chromatin-modifying enzymes.
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Author affiliations
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Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA.
Email: mss@uclink4.berkeley.edu
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