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Mol. Cell. Biol., 05 1997, 2631-2641, Vol 17, No. 5
PB Nakajima and MJ Bosma
Lymphocyte development requires the assembly of antigen receptor genes
through the specialized process of V(D)J recombination. This process is
initiated by cleavage at the junction between coding segments (V, D, and J)
and the recombination signal sequences that border these segments,
resulting in generation of double-strand break intermediates. We have used
a two-dimensional gel system to characterize broken molecules arising from
V(D)J recombination at the T-cell receptor (TCR) delta locus and have
identified linear species excised by Ddelta1- Ddelta2 and V-Ddelta2
rearrangement in thymus DNA. Relatively few (approximately 10)
V-Ddelta2-excised linear species were detected in DNA from fetal
thymocytes. The sizes of these species corresponded to the estimated
distances between Ddelta2 and the V gene segments utilized by gammadelta T
cells and indicated that both Ddelta2-proximal and -distal V gene segments
are targeted for V-Ddelta2 rearrangement. Similar-sized species were
observed in DNA from thymocytes of scid mice in which T-cell development is
arrested prior to TCR expression. Since previous studies suggest that the
TCR alpha/delta locus encodes more than 100 V gene segments, our results
indicate that a few select V gene segments are predominantly targeted for
rearrangement to Ddelta2, and this primarily accounts for the restricted
Vdelta gene repertoire of gammadelta T cells.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Characterization of excised DNA intermediates associated with V(D)J recombination at the T-cell receptor delta locus
Institute for Cancer Research, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19111, USA.
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