Abstract

Two waves of immunoglobulin gene rearrangements, first of the heavy, then of the light chain gene loci form functional immunoglobulin genes during B cell development. In mouse bone marrow the differential surface expression of B220 (CD45R), c- kit, CD25, and surrogate light chain as well as the cell cycle status allows FACS separation of the cells in which these two waves of rearrangements occur. The gene products of two recombination activating genes, RAG1 and RAG2 are crucial for this rearrangement process. Here, we show that the expression of the RAG genes is twice up- and down-regulated, at the transcriptional level for RAGI and RAG2, and at the postranscriptional level for RAG2 protein. Expression levels are high in D → J H and V H → DJ H rearranging proB and preB-I cells, low in preB cells expressing the preB cell receptor on the cell surface, and high again in V L → J L rearranging small preB-II cells. In immature B cells expressing on the cell surface RAGI and RAG2 mRNA is down-regulated, whereas RAG2 protein levels are maintained. Down-regulation of RAGI and RAG2 gene expression after productive rearrangement at one heavy chain allele might be part of the mechanisms that prevent further rearrangements at the other allele.

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