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103


Epigenetic regulation of V(D)J recombination

Johnson, Kristen; Chaumeil, Julie; Skok, Jane A
Chromosome breaks are dangerous business, carrying the risk of loss of genetic information or, even worse, misrepair of the break, leading to outcomes such as dicentric chromosomes or oncogenic translocations. Yet V(D)J recombination, a process that breaks, rearranges and repairs chromosomes, is crucial to the development of the adaptive immune system, for it gives B- and T-cells the capacity to generate a virtually unlimited repertoire of antigen receptor proteins to combat an equally vast array of antigens. To minimize the risks inherent in chromosomal breakage, V(D)J recombination is carefully orchestrated at multiple levels, ranging from DNA sequence requirements all the way up to chromatin conformation and nuclear architecture. In the present chapter we introduce various regulatory controls, with an emphasis on epigenetic mechanisms and recent work that has begun to elucidate their interdependence
PMID: 20822496
ISSN: 1744-1358
CID: 112204

Chromosome dynamics and the regulation of V(D)J recombination

Hewitt, Susannah L; Chaumeil, Julie; Skok, Jane A
Perhaps no process has provided more insight into the fine manipulation of locus accessibility than antigen receptor rearrangement. V(D)J recombination is carried out by the lymphoid-specific recombination-activating (RAG 1 and 2) proteins and the non-homologous end joining machinery; yet, it occurs only at specific loci (or portions of loci) during specific developmental stages. This spatiotemporal restriction of recombination is achieved through precise alterations in locus accessibility. In this article, we discuss the work of our laboratory in elucidating how nuclear sublocalization, chromosome conformation, and locus interactions contribute to regulating this complex process. We also discuss what is known about how key factors in B-cell development (such as the ubiquitously expressed helix loop helix protein E2A, the B-cell specific transcription factors EBF1 and Pax5, and the interleukin-7 cytokine signaling pathway) exert their effects through changes in nuclear dynamics
PMID: 20727028
ISSN: 1600-065x
CID: 111975

V(D)J recombination: a paradigm for studying chromosome interactions in mammalian cells [Editorial]

Skok, Jane A
PMID: 22121867
ISSN: 1750-192x
CID: 255482

It takes two: Communication between homologous alleles preserves genomic stability during V(D)J recombination

Brandt, Vicky L; Hewitt, Susannah L; Skok, Jane A
Chromosome pairing is involved in X chromosome inactivation, a classic instance of monoallelic gene expression. Antigen receptor genes are also monoallelically expressed ('allelically excluded') by B and T lymphocytes, and we asked whether pairing contributed to the regulation of V(D)J recombination at these loci. We found that homologous immunoglobulin (Ig) alleles pair up during recombination. Homologous Ig pairing is substantially reduced in the absence of the RAG1/RAG2 recombinase, but a transgene expressing an active site RAG1 mutant (which binds but does not cleave DNA) rescues pairing in Rag1(-/-) developing B cells. RAG-mediated cleavage on one allele induces the other allele to relocate to pericentromeric heterochromatin (PCH), likely to ensure that only one allele is cut at a time. This relocation to PCH requires the DNA damage sensor ATM (ataxia telengiectasia mutated). In the absence of ATM, repositioning at PCH is diminished and the incidence of cleavage on both alleles is significantly increased. ATM appears to be activated by the introduction of a double-strand break on one allele to act in trans on the uncleaved allele, repositioning or maintaining it at PCH, to prevent bi-allelic recombination and chromosomal translocations
PMCID:3035125
PMID: 21327101
ISSN: 1949-1042
CID: 138156

RAG-1 and ATM coordinate monoallelic recombination and nuclear positioning of immunoglobulin loci

Hewitt, Susannah L; Yin, Bu; Ji, Yanhong; Chaumeil, Julie; Marszalek, Katarzyna; Tenthorey, Jeannette; Salvagiotto, Giorgia; Steinel, Natalie; Ramsey, Laura B; Ghysdael, Jacques; Farrar, Michael A; Sleckman, Barry P; Schatz, David G; Busslinger, Meinrad; Bassing, Craig H; Skok, Jane A
Coordinated recombination of homologous antigen receptor loci is thought to be important for allelic exclusion. Here we show that homologous immunoglobulin alleles pair in a stage-specific way that mirrors the recombination patterns of these loci. The frequency of homologous immunoglobulin pairing was much lower in the absence of the RAG-1-RAG-2 recombinase and was restored in Rag1-/- developing B cells with a transgene expressing a RAG-1 active-site mutant that supported DNA binding but not cleavage. The introduction of DNA breaks on one immunoglobulin allele induced ATM-dependent repositioning of the other allele to pericentromeric heterochromatin. ATM activated by the cleaved allele acts in trans on the uncleaved allele to prevent biallelic recombination and chromosome breaks or translocations
PMCID:2693356
PMID: 19448632
ISSN: 1529-2916
CID: 99020

Jane Skok: choreography of allelic exclusion. [Interview]

Skok, Jane
PMCID:2442626
PMID: 18606859
ISSN: 1540-9538
CID: 81075

Association between the Igk and Igh immunoglobulin loci mediated by the 3' Igk enhancer induces 'decontraction' of the Igh locus in pre-B cells

Hewitt, Susannah L; Farmer, Deborah; Marszalek, Katarzyna; Cadera, Emily; Liang, Hong-Erh; Xu, Yang; Schlissel, Mark S; Skok, Jane A
Variable-(diversity)-joining (V(D)J) recombination at loci encoding the immunoglobulin heavy chain (Igh) and immunoglobulin light chain (Igk) takes place sequentially during successive stages in B cell development. Using three-dimensional DNA fluorescence in situ hybridization, here we identify a lineage-specific and stage-specific interchromosomal association between these two loci that marks the transition between Igh and Igk recombination. Colocalization occurred between pericentromerically located alleles in pre-B cells and was mediated by the 3' Igk enhancer. Deletion of this regulatory element prevented association of the Igh and Igk loci, inhibited pericentromeric recruitment and locus 'decontraction' of an Igh allele, and resulted in greater distal rearrangement of the gene encoding the variable heavy-chain region. Our data indicate involvement of the Igk locus and its 3' enhancer in directing the Igh locus to a repressive nuclear subcompartment and inducing the Igh locus to decontract
PMCID:2583163
PMID: 18297074
ISSN: 1529-2916
CID: 78360

Regulation of immunoglobulin light-chain recombination by the transcription factor IRF-4 and the attenuation of interleukin-7 signaling

Johnson, Kristen; Hashimshony, Tamar; Sawai, Catherine M; Pongubala, Jagan M R; Skok, Jane A; Aifantis, Iannis; Singh, Harinder
Productive rearrangement of the immunoglobulin heavy-chain locus triggers a major developmental checkpoint that promotes limited clonal expansion of pre-B cells, thereby culminating in cell-cycle arrest and rearrangement of light-chain loci. By using Irf4-/-Irf8-/- pre-B cells, we demonstrated that two pathways converge to synergistically drive light-chain rearrangement, but not simply as a consequence of cell-cycle exit. One pathway was directly dependent on transcription factor IRF-4, whose expression was elevated by pre-B cell receptor signaling. IRF-4 targeted the immunoglobulin 3'Ekappa and Elambda enhancers and positioned a kappa allele away from pericentromeric heterochromatin. The other pathway was triggered by attenuation of IL-7 signaling and activated the iEkappa enhancer via binding of the transcription factor E2A. IRF-4 also regulated expression of chemokine receptor Cxcr4 and promoted migration of pre-B cells in response to the chemokine ligand CXCL12. We propose that IRF-4 coordinates the two pathways regulating light-chain recombination by positioning pre-B cells away from IL-7-expressing stromal cells
PMID: 18280186
ISSN: 1074-7613
CID: 81074

Silencing and nuclear repositioning of the lambda5 gene locus at the pre-B cell stage requires Aiolos and OBF-1

Karnowski, Alexander; Cao, Chun; Matthias, Gabriele; Carotta, Sebastian; Corcoran, Lynn M; Martensson, Inga-Lill; Skok, Jane A; Matthias, Patrick
The chromatin regulator Aiolos and the transcriptional coactivator OBF-1 have been implicated in regulating aspects of B cell maturation and activation. Mice lacking either of these factors have a largely normal early B cell development. However, when both factors are eliminated simultaneously a block is uncovered at the transition between pre-B and immature B cells, indicating that these proteins exert a critical function in developing B lymphocytes. In mice deficient for Aiolos and OBF-1, the numbers of immature B cells are reduced, small pre-BII cells are increased and a significant impairment in immunoglobulin light chain DNA rearrangement is observed. We identified genes whose expression is deregulated in the pre-B cell compartment of these mice. In particular, we found that components of the pre-BCR, such as the surrogate light chain genes lambda5 and VpreB, fail to be efficiently silenced in double-mutant mice. Strikingly, developmentally regulated nuclear repositioning of the lambda5 gene is impaired in pre-B cells lacking OBF-1 and Aiolos. These studies uncover a novel role for OBF-1 and Aiolos in controlling the transcription and nuclear organization of genes involved in pre-BCR function
PMCID:2571989
PMID: 18974788
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 105353

Dynamic changes in accessibility, nuclear positioning, recombination, and transcription at the Ig kappa locus

Fitzsimmons, Sean P; Bernstein, Ralph M; Max, Edward E; Skok, Jane A; Shapiro, Marjorie A
The 3-megabase Igkappa locus undergoes differentially controlled nuclear positioning events and chromatin structural changes during the course of B cell development. The temporal association of chromatin structural changes, transcription, and recombination at the Igkappa locus was determined in a murine pre-B cell line that can be induced to recombine at the Igkappa locus and in ex vivo-cultured murine pre-B cells. Additionally, the timing of nuclear positioning relative to the temporal order of chromatin structural changes and recombination and transcription was determined. We demonstrate that before induction, the Igkappa locus was poised for recombination; both alleles were in a contracted state, and the enrichment of histone modifications and germline transcripts of specific Vkappa genes were observed. Histone modifications of the Vkappa genes did not vary upon induction but the levels of modifications correlated with the levels of germline Vkappa gene transcripts and recombination. Upon induction, but before VkappaJkappa recombination, centromeric recruitment of single Igkappa alleles occurred. DNase I sensitivity of the entire locus increased gradually over the course of differentiation while the enrichment of histone modifications downstream of the Vkappa genes was increased in the silencer regions upstream of Jkappa1, within the Igkappa sterile transcript, the kappa constant region, the Ekappai and Ekappa3' enhancers, and the recombining sequence. The ex vivo pre-B cells showed similar patterns of histone modifications across the locus except at the Vkappa genes. In this study, H3 acetylation correlated with levels of germline transcripts while H3 methylation correlated with levels of recombination
PMID: 17911612
ISSN: 0022-1767
CID: 81073