Gene segment selection in V (D) J recombination: accessibility and beyond

MS Krangel - Nature immunology, 2003 - nature.com
Nature immunology, 2003nature.com
Abstract V (D) J recombination assembles genes encoding antigen receptors according to
defined developmental programs in immature B and T lymphocytes. The'accessibility
hypothesis' was initially invoked to explain how a single recombinase complex could control
the locus and allele specificity of V (D) J recombination. It has been since shown that
recombination signal sequences themselves influence recombination efficiency and
specificity in ways that had not been previously appreciated. Recent developments have …
Abstract
V(D)J recombination assembles genes encoding antigen receptors according to defined developmental programs in immature B and T lymphocytes. The 'accessibility hypothesis' was initially invoked to explain how a single recombinase complex could control the locus and allele specificity of V(D)J recombination. It has been since shown that recombination signal sequences themselves influence recombination efficiency and specificity in ways that had not been previously appreciated. Recent developments have increased our understanding of how the chromatin barrier to V(D)J recombination is regulated, and how chromatin control and the properties of the underlying recombination signal sequences may cooperate to create diverse, lineage-restricted and allelically excluded repertoires of antigen receptors.
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