Clonal allelic predetermination of immunoglobulin-κ rearrangement
Author(s) -
Marganit Farago,
Chaggai Rosenbluh,
Maya Tevlin,
Shira Fraenkel,
S. P. Schlesinger,
Hagit Masika,
Masha Gouzman,
Grace Teng,
David G. Schatz,
Yoach Rais,
Jacob Hanna,
Alexander Mildner,
Steffen Jung,
Gustavo Mostoslavsky,
Howard Cedar,
Yehudit Bergman
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 15.993
H-Index - 1226
eISSN - 1476-4687
pISSN - 0028-0836
DOI - 10.1038/nature11496
Subject(s) - biology , allele , allelic exclusion , locus (genetics) , genetics , gene , stem cell , haematopoiesis , lineage (genetic) , immune system , t cell , t cell receptor
Although most genes are expressed biallelically, a number of key genomic sites--including immune and olfactory receptor regions--are controlled monoallelically in a stochastic manner, with some cells expressing the maternal allele and others the paternal allele in the target tissue. Very little is known about how this phenomenon is regulated and programmed during development. Here, using mouse immunoglobulin-κ (Igκ) as a model system, we demonstrate that although individual haematopoietic stem cells are characterized by allelic plasticity, early lymphoid lineage cells become committed to the choice of a single allele, and this decision is then stably maintained in a clonal manner that predetermines monoallelic rearrangement in B cells. This is accompanied at the molecular level by underlying allelic changes in asynchronous replication timing patterns at the κ locus. These experiments may serve to define a new concept of stem cell plasticity.
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