Key Points
ATM prevents aberrant resolution of attempted deletional Vβ rearrangements.
ATM and weak Vβ RSSs facilitate interallelic competition for Vβ recombination.
ATM and poor-quality Vβ RSSs cooperate to help enforce TCRβ allelic exclusion.
Abstract
The monoallelic expression (allelic exclusion) of diverse lymphocyte Ag receptor genes enables specific immune responses. Allelic exclusion is achieved by asynchronous initiation of V(D)J recombination between alleles and protein encoded by successful rearrangement on the first allele signaling permanent inhibition of V rearrangement on the other allele. The ATM kinase that guides DNA repair and transiently suppresses V(D)J recombination also helps impose allelic exclusion through undetermined mechanisms. At the TCRβ locus, one Vβ gene segment (V31) rearranges only by inversion, whereas all other Vβ segments rearrange by deletion except for rare cases in which they rearrange through inversion following V31 rearrangement. The poor-quality recombination signal sequences (RSSs) of V31 and V2 help establish TCRβ gene repertoire and allelic exclusion by stochastically limiting initiation of Vβ rearrangements before TCRβ protein-signaled permanent silencing of Vβ recombination. We show in this study in mice that ATM functions with these RSSs and the weak V1 RSS to shape TCRβ gene repertoire by restricting their Vβ segments from initiating recombination and hindering aberrant nonfunctional Vβ recombination products, especially during inversional V31 rearrangements. We find that ATM collaborates with the V1 and V2 RSSs to help enforce allelic exclusion by facilitating competition between alleles for initiation and functional completion of rearrangements of these Vβ segments. Our data demonstrate that the fundamental genetic DNA elements that underlie inefficient Vβ recombination cooperate with ATM-mediated rapid DNA damage responses to help establish diversity and allelic exclusion of TCRβ genes.
Footnotes
↵1 G.S.W. and E.J.C. are co-first authors.
This work was supported by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Grants T32 AI055428 (to G.S.W.) and RO1 AI 130231 (to C.H.B.).
- Received June 4, 2021.
- Accepted March 23, 2022.
- Copyright © 2022 by The American Association of Immunologists, Inc.
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