Abstract

Although the mouse immunoglobulin heavy chain ( Igh) locus contains 15 heavy chain V (Vh) gene families, at least half of the Vh gene segments are members of the VhJ558 family. This large Vh gene family represents the least characterized germline coding regions of any of the mouse antigen receptor loci and the contribution of individual VhJ558 genes to the preimmune repertoire is poorly understood. In fact, relatively few germline VhJ558 sequences have been reported for BALB/c, the foundation strain for mouse immunoglobulin genetics and the prototypic strain of the Igh a haplotype. Here we present a database consisting of 66 sequences estimated to represent one-half of the total number of functional BALB/c VhJ558 genes. Our results indicate that a subset of the VhJ558 genes is highly expressed in the preimmune repertoire, with just nine Vh sequences accounting for nearly 50% of the VhJ558 heavy chains expressed by splenic B cells. We show that this disparity in the expressed Vh gene repertoire is not due to the position of the Vh genes relative to the Dh cluster or to multiple germline copies of the highly expressed VhJ558 genes. Together, these data constitute the first detailed analysis of functional BALB/c VhJ558 genes, demonstrate a striking bias in the use of particular VhJ558 genes in the preimmune repertoire, and provide sufficient information to study the regulation of the Dh-distal region of the Igh-V locus at the level of individual genes.

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