Abstract

Somatic hypermutation (SHM) and gene conversion (GCV) are closely related processes that increase the diversity the primary immunoglobulin repertoire. In both processes the activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) converts cytosine residues to uracils within the DNA of the immunoglobulin (Ig) genes in a transcription-dependent manner, and subsequent error-prone repair processes lead to changes in the antigen recognition site of the encoded receptors. This activity is specifically recruited to the Ig loci by unknown mechanisms. Our analyses of the chicken B-cell line DT40, and derivatives thereof, now revealed that even the closest neighbors of the Ig light chain (IgL) gene are protected from AID activity, albeit being transcribed and thus acting as potential targets of AID. Our findings are in support of a model in which cis-acting DNA boundary elements restrict AID activity to the IgL locus and guard the genome in the vicinity of the IgL gene from deleterious mutations.

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