
Cmu gene rearrangement of mouse immunoglobulin genes in normal B cells occurs on both the expressed and nonexpressed chromosomes.
Author(s) -
Carol Nottenburg,
Irving L. Weissman
Publication year - 1981
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences of the united states of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.78.1.484
Subject(s) - microbiology and biotechnology , ecori , biology , allotype , immunoglobulin gene , immunoglobulin d , immunoglobulin heavy chain , gene , allelic exclusion , antibody , genetics , restriction enzyme , b cell , t cell , immune system , t cell receptor
We have examined the organization of heavy-chain immunoglobulin genes on both the expressed and nonexpressed chromosomes of normal B lymphocytes from allotype heterozygous (BALB/c X C57BL/J)F1 mice. The C mu genes of BALB/c mice are on 12.4-kilobase EcoRI and 13.1-kilobase Kpn I restriction fragments, whereas those of C57BL/J mice are on 13.6-kilobase EcoRI and 14.3-kilobase Kpn I restriction fragments, allowing the examination of rearrangements on each chromosome independently. B lymphocytes from spleen and Peyer's patches expressing both IgD and IgM of the BALB/c allotype were isolated with a fluorescence-activated cell sorter. EcoRI and Kpn I restriction digests were hybridized with a C mu gene-containing probe. The C mu gene is present on both chromosomes. DNA rearrangements occur on both the expressed and nonexpressed chromosome within the 3.6-kilobase Kpn I/EcoRI restriction fragment containing the joining (JH) gene locus. We conclude that allelic exclusion of heavy-chain immunoglobulin gene expression is not mediated by JH-region DNA rearrangement of the expressed chromosome only. In contrast, analysis of the C kappa gene region from the same sorted B-cell DNA reveals a substantial quantity of germ-line context DNA. We also demonstrate that the deletions observed on the Eco RI fragment containing the C mu gene in myeloma cells and in C mu gene-containing recombinant DNAs do not usually occur in normally differentiating B lymphocytes and are likely to be confined to myeloma tumor cells.