Abstract

Circular DNA, derived from lymphocytes of juvenile channel catfish, was used to construct lambda libraries that were screened to identify the products of immunoglobulin DH-JH excision events. Clones were characterized that contained DH to JH recombination signal joints. The signal joints represented 23-bp recombination signal sequences (RSS) identical to germline JH segments that were adjacent to DH 12-bp RSS elements. DH flanking regions within the clones were used to probe a genomic library. Three germline DH gene segments containing 11-19 bp coding regions flanked by 12-bp RSS elements with conserved heptamers and nonamers were identified. The DH locus is closely linked to the JH locus, and Southern blots indicate that the DH segments represent different single member gene families. Analysis of H chain cDNA shows that each germline DH segment was expressed in functional VDJ recombination events involving different JH segments and members of different VH families. Several aspects of CDR3 junctional diversity were evident, including deletion of coding region nucleotides, N- and P-region nucleotide additions, alternate DH reading frame utilization, and point mutations. Coding region motifs of catfish DH segments are phylogenetically conserved in some DH segments of higher vertebrates. These studies indicate that the structure, genomic organization, and recombination patterns of DH segments typically associated with higher vertebrates evolved early in vertebrate phylogeny at the level of the bony fish.

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