Abstract
Antibody VDJ recombination is ensured by evolutionarily conserved recombination signals (RS). The 12/23 rule postulates that only gene segments with asymmetrically spaced RS recombine with one another. Two unusually long D genes (170 bp) with irregular RS (DIR) have been reported in humans and have been postulated to participate actively in VDJ recombination, thus frequently contributing to the Ab heavy chain third hypervariable region (CDR3). However, the limited sequence information retained in the CDR3 along with significant sequence diversity has precluded an accurate assessment of the actual role and genomic diversity of DIR genes. Furthermore, DIR genes pose an interesting puzzle in terms of their precise mechanism of recombination because they possess multiple and imperfect RS, often located up to 30 bp away from the recombining fragment within the DIR coding region. Here we present conclusive evidence for the existence of additional human germ-line DIR genes and preliminary evidence that suggests the absence of DIR-like sequences in nonprimate animals. We also show that DIR genes are under the transcriptional control of VH-independent promoters and have the potential to encode a D mu protein of 105 amino acids. Finally, DIR genes seem at least in early fetal life to recombine preferentially through the conventional 3' RS.
- Copyright © 1994 by American Association of Immunologists
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