A Targeted Deletion of a Region Upstream from the Jkappa Cluster Impairs kappa  Chain Rearrangement In Cis in Mice and in the 103/bcl2 Cell Line

By Laurentiu Cocea,* Annie De Smet,* Mahasti Saghatchian,* Simon Fillatreau,* Laurent Ferradini,* Stéphane Schurmans,Dagger Jean-Claude Weill,* and Claude-Agnès Reynaud*

From the * Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unité 373, Faculté de Médecine Necker, Paris, France; and Dagger  Institut de Recherches Interdisciplinaires en Biologie Humaine et Nucleare (IRIBHN), Faculté de Médecine, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Bruxelles, Belgium

    Abstract
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References

We have shown previously that a mutation of the KI-KII site immediately 5' to Jkappa 1 on the mouse immunoglobulin light chain kappa  locus reduces the rearrangement level in cis, although it does not affect transcription. Here we deleted by homologous recombination in mouse embryonic stem cells a 4-kb DNA fragment, located immediately upstream of the KI-KII element, which contains the promoter of the long germline transcript. Analysis of gene-targeted heterozygous mouse splenic B cells showed a strong decrease in rearrangement for the allele bearing the deletion. When both the KI-KII mutation and the 4-kb deletion were present on the same allele, the overall reduction in rearrangement was stronger than with the 4-kb deletion alone underlying the role of these two elements in the regulation of rearrangement. The same deletion was performed by homologous recombination on one allele of the rearrangement- inducible mouse 103/bcl2-hygroR pre-B cell line, and resulted in a similar reduction in the induction of rearrangement of the mutated allele. This result validates this cell line as an in vitro model for studying the incidence of gene-targeted modifications of the kappa  locus on the regulation of rearrangement.

Key words: regulation of rearrangement;  mouse immunoglobulin genes;  allelic exclusion;  germline promoter;  positive regulatory element
    Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References

The cell stage- and locus-specific control of rearrangement remains a critical issue in understanding how T and B cell receptor (TCR and BCR)1 loci are differentially assembled during lymphoid differentiation (for review see reference 1).

It has been proposed that transcription factors coupled with germline transcription of the different elements before their assembly could be the prerequisite signal permitting access to the recombinase. Supporting this proposition, it has been shown that mutations of transcriptional control elements of TCR and BCR genes significantly impaired their rearrangement efficiency (for review see references 2, 3). Along this line, a region upstream of the TCR-alpha J locus containing the promoter of the predominant TCR-alpha germline transcript was shown to control accessibility of the most 5'Js (4). On the other hand, it has also appeared that transcription factors and germline transcription may not be the sole elements controlling rearrangement, as some experimental settings show a dissociation between the two events (5). We have previously shown that the KI-KII motif (9), located immediately upstream of the Jkappa 1 segment in the mouse V-J kappa  intervening sequence, was an enhancer of rearrangement, although it did not seem to play a role on germline transcription initiated immediately upstream of Jkappa 1 (10).

To explore whether there are other regulatory elements in the mouse V-J kappa  intervening sequence, we constructed mice carrying a 4-kb deletion upstream of KI-KII, the deleted fragment encompassing the promoter of the long J-C kappa  germline transcript (11, 12). It is shown here that this deletion strongly inhibits rearrangement of the kappa  locus. This result is further confirmed when the same deletion is performed by homologous recombination of the light chain locus in the rearrangement-inducible pre-B cell line 103/ bcl2-hygroR (13), thus validating the use of this cell line for further gene targeting experiments.

    Materials and Methods
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Genetic Constructs.

The pSPIg8 plasmid, which has a 12.7-kb BamHI genomic insert containing the New Zealand black mouse Jkappa cluster, was provided by B. Van Ness (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN). The following modifications were introduced in defined subclones, and used thereafter to reconstitute the complete BamHI fragment: the loxP-flanked neoR gene, obtained from the pLZ-neoR plasmid (provided by H. Gu, NIAID, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD), was blunt-end inserted in the most 5' HindIII site. A XhoI site was introduced 127-bp upstream of Jkappa 1 by site-directed mutagenesis (In Vitro Mutagenesis kit; Bio-Rad) and was used thereafter to insert a XhoI-SalI loxP fragment from pLZ- neoR in constructs containing or not containing the KI-KII mutation (10). The HSV-tk gene obtained from the pIC19R plasmid (14) was blunt-end ligated in the SalI site of the pSPIg8 plasmid. The final constructs thus contained three loxP sequence elements in the same orientation (verified by sequencing) allowing for the Cre-mediated deletion of either the neoR gene alone (control mice or clones) or of both the neoR gene and the 4-kb fragment (see Fig. 1). For constructions used in the Abelson virus-transformed 103/4 cell line (13), a diagnostic EcoRI site was created instead of the natural StyI site between Jkappa 1 and Jkappa 2 by site-directed mutagenesis on both the KI-KII-mutated and the wild-type constructs.


View larger version (14K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 1.   Genetic constructs used for homologous recombination in mice and the 103 cell line. (a) Scheme of the mouse kappa  locus. The horizontal arrow shows the start site for the long germline transcript and the vertical arrow points to the location of the KI-KII element. Parentheses delineate the 4-kb fragment deleted in this study. (b) Partial restriction map of the 12.7-kb BamHI fragment of plasmid pSPIg8. (c) Construction of targeting vectors: the HSV-tk gene, the loxP-flanked neoR cassette, and a loxP site upstream Jkappa 1 (inserted in a XhoI site created by site-directed mutagenesis) have been introduced in two different constructs, bearing or not the KI-KII mutation. Constructions used for transfection of the 103 cell line contain in addition an EcoRI tag replacing the natural StyI site between Jkappa 1 and Jkappa 2. (d and e) Configuration of the mutated alleles after Cre-mediated deletion: d, deletion of the neoR cassette (loxP control); e, deletion of the neoR cassette and the 4-kb fragment (4-kb deletion). Both configurations are generated with and without the KI-KII mutation.

Establishment of the 103/bcl2-hygro Cell Line.

Since the 103/4-bcl2 cell line was derived by transfection of a bcl2 construct carrying the neoR gene that is present in our gene targeting constructs, we established a new 103/bcl2-hygroR derivative by transfection of the original 103/4 cell line with the pSFFV bcl2 expression vector (provided by S.J. Korsmeyer, The Rockefeller University Press, New York) in which the neoR gene was replaced by a hygroR gene (15) driven by the CMV promoter.

Transfection and Homologous Recombination in Embryonic Stem and 103/4 Cells.

E14.1 enbryonic stem (ES) cells were cultured, transfected, and selected as previously described (10). The analysis of recombinant clones before and after Cre-mediated deletion of the neoR gene and/or of the 4-kb DNA fragment was performed by Southern blot analysis similarly for ES and 103-derived cells. The transfection protocol of the 103/4 cell line was as follows: 107 cells were electroporated with 30 µg linearized DNA in 800 µl RPMI, 10 mM Hepes, pH 7.4 (300 V, 900 µF). The cells were immediately resuspended in 50 ml RPMI, 10% FCS, 0.05 mM beta -ME, and subcloned in 96-well plates at 20,000 cells/well. Selection with 1.5 mg/ml hygromycin B (Boehringer Mannheim) or G418 (GIBCO BRL) was applied 48 h later. The resistant clones were then subcloned at 0.5 cells/well, grown in culture for 3 wk, and analyzed by Southern blot after expansion. Approximately 10% of each of the transfectants were targeted to the kappa  locus, but only in a fraction of them did the recombination extend over the 10 kb containing the three loxP sites and the EcoRI restriction site. In a typical experiment, 66 clones were obtained from 107 cells, of which 6 were targeted to the kappa  locus and 1 contained the three loxP modifications.

Generation of Chimeric Mice.

Chimeric mice were obtained after aggregation of gene-targeted ES cells (see below) with CD-1 morulas. Analysis of ES-derived lymphoid cells took advantage of a polymorphism that frequently occurs between the CD-1 and 129 cells at the Ly5 locus.

Spleen Cell Sorting.

The anti-mouse Ly5.2-PE and Ly5.1-PE antibodies were provided by B. Rocha (INSERM, Faculté de Médicine Necker, Paris, France). Anti-mouse CD19-FITC was purchased from PharMingen. Spleen cells from chimeric mice were prepared and labeled as previously described (10), and Ly5.2+, CD19+, and CD19- cells (~50% chimerism in the spleen) were purified using a FACSVantage® cell sorter (Becton Dickinson).

Germline Retention Analysis of DNA in Mouse Spleen Cells and in 103/bcl2-hygroR Cells.

Genomic DNA preparation was performed as described (10). Alkaline Southern blots after digestion of genomic DNA with BamHI and hybridization with a 1.8-kb SphI-PstI random-labeled DNA fragment (probe C) encompassing the mouse Jkappa cluster were performed as previously described (10). Germline retention in control mice was carried out by PCR with the primers used in the reverse transcription (RT)-PCR detection of the long germline transcript from the wild-type allele (see below).

Quantitative PCR Analysis of Rearrangement in 103/bcl2-hygroR Cells.

Vkappa to Jkappa 1 rearrangement products were amplified with the primers described in references 16 and 17 (our PCR parameters: 1 min at 94°C; 1.5 min at 66°C; 1.5 min at 72°C; 24 cycles). StyI and EcoRI digestions were carried out for 4 h in separate reactions to assess the percentage of rearrangement corresponding to the wild-type and mutated alleles, respectively.

RT-PCR Analysis of Germline Transcripts in 103/bcl2-hygroR- derived Cells.

Total RNA was extracted with Trizol (GIBCO BRL) from 106 cells cultured at the permissive (34°C) and the nonpermissive (40°C) temperatures for 6 and 12 h. After reverse transcription with an equimolar mixture of oligo-dT and random primers (Stratagene), cDNA was resuspended in 50 µl of water. For each sample, four different amounts of cDNA (2, 1, 0.5, and 0.25 µl) were amplified in separate reactions for each primer set described below to avoid plateau effects. For the long germline transcript, the 3' primer was AGCAATTCCCTTCACTCAAACCCCCATAC for both alleles; the 5' primers were GTCTGAAAGAGGAGTTTACGTCCAGC (hereafter referred to as loxP-5'-primer) for the mutated allele containing a loxP site (1 min 94°C; 1 min 66°C; 1.5 min 72°C; 30 cycles) and CCTATGGAAGAGCAGCGAGTGCC (hereafter referred to as wt-5'-primer) for the wild-type allele (same PCR parameters, but 27 cycles). Normalization was performed with respect to beta -actin (mouse beta -actin amplimer set; Clontech). The PCR products were blotted onto nylon membranes and hybridized with the oligonucleotide DAR25 (17) for the long transcript, and with AACATGGCATTGTTAC for beta -actin.

Quantitation.

Southern blots and PCR hybridizations were exposed to phosphor screens, scanned with a Storm 480 machine (Molecular Dynamics), and analyzed with the public domain NIH Image program (developed at NIH and available at http://rsb.info.nih.gov/nih-image).

    Results
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References
Deletion of the 4-kb Fragment on One kappa  Allele in Mouse B Cells Results in a Strong Decrease in Rearrangement when Compared with the Wild-type Allele.

Gene-targeted Ly5.2+ B and non-B cells were sorted from spleens of chimeric mice obtained by aggregation of mutated ES cells with Ly5.1+ morulas. In a first series of mice (D5, D6, D7) the sorted cells carried the 4-kb deletion on one kappa  allele (construct depicted in Fig. 1 e). Analysis by Southern blot (Fig. 2 and Table I) of the percentage of wild-type over mutated allele germline retention in B cells of three different mice (14/86, 15/85, and 23/77) versus non-B cells (47/53, 44/56, and 49/51) showed a strong decrease in rearrangement levels for the mutated allele, indicating that a positive regulatory element of rearrangement had been inactivated upon deletion. Germline retention analysis of B cells from a chimera bearing only the two loxP sites (control mice) indicated that these two elements had no effect on rearrangement (Fig. 2 d).


View larger version (59K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 


View larger version (16K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 2.   Effect of the 4-kb deletion and the KI-KII mutation on kappa  light chain gene rearrangement in mutant B cells from chimeric mice. (a) Scheme of wild-type and mutant kappa  alleles analyzed in mouse chimeras obtained from heterozygous, gene-targeted ES cells, with sizes of BamHI fragments analyzed in b by Southern blot. The position of the probe C used in b and of the PCR primers used in d is indicated. (b) Southern blot analysis of BamHI-digested DNA from Ly5.2+, CD19+, or CD19- splenic cells (see panel c). Germline retention at the kappa  locus is analyzed for the mutant allele (8 kb) and the wild-type allele (12.7 kb) in ES-derived splenic cells bearing the 4-kb deletion alone (D#) or the 4-kb deletion together with the KI-KII mutation (DM#), and compared with the original ES clone. Germline retention of wild-type versus mutant alleles is quantified in Table I. (c) Gene-targeted splenic B (Ly5.2+CD19+) and non-B (Ly5.2+CD19-) cells are purified from mouse chimeras by an allelic difference at the Ly5 locus between the ES cell and the recipient blastocyst. (d) For loxP control mice (LP#), germline retention of both alleles in splenic CD19+ and CD19- cells is analyzed by PCR, with the primers indicated in a.

                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

Table I
Wild-type/Mutated Allele Retention in Mice Expressed as Percentages of Total Germline Retention

The 4-kb Deletion and the KI-KII Mutation Have Cumulative Effects.

A similar analysis was carried out in a second series of mice (DM1 and DM4), which had the KI-KII mutation on the same allele as the 4-kb deletion (Fig. 1 e, with mutated KI-KII motif). We previously showed that the KI-KII mutation results in a very strong reduction of kappa  rearrangement in cis (10). The analysis showed that rearrangement of the mutated allele was further reduced when compared with the wild-type allele when both the deletion and the KI-KII mutation were present in cis (7/93 and 3/97 percentage wild-type over mutated allele germline retention in B cells versus 47/53 in non-B cells) (Fig. 2 and Table I). This stronger reduction in rearrangement in the presence of both mutations was confirmed by PCR analysis (data not shown), indicating that deletion of the 4-kb DNA fragment and mutation of the KI-KII motif have cumulative effects.

Deletion of the 4-kb Fragment Reduces Rearrangement of the Mutated Allele in the 103/bcl2-hygroR Pre-B Cell Line.

The 103/bcl2-hygroR cell line, transformed with a temperature-sensitive mutant Abelson virus, rearranges the light chain locus when shifted to the nonpermissive temperature (34°Cright-arrow 39°C). It was shown that this rearrangement process follows a kinetics where 20-30% of kappa  loci are rearranged in 48 h; to a lesser degree, the lambda  loci of these cells also rearrange during this time course. After 4 d most of the cells have rearranged both kappa  alleles (13). Upon subcloning after 24 h of induction, we have observed that among 17 clones, 6 had rearranged one kappa  allele, 2 had rearranged both alleles, and 9 had their kappa  alleles in germline configuration (data not shown).

Rearrangement of the wild-type over mutated alleles was assessed in the 103/bcl2-hygroR-derived clones carrying the following mutations, introduced by homologous recombination on one kappa  allele: the 4-kb deletion alone, the KI-KII mutation alone with the two loxP sites, the two mutations together, or the control loxP sites only (Fig. 3 and Table II). We have chosen clones where the rearrangement status of the kappa  loci was close to germline at the permissive temperature, since it has been reported previously that a small percentage of these cells can rearrange spontaneously (13).


View larger version (52K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 3.   Effect of the 4-kb deletion and the KI-KII mutation on kappa  light chain gene rearrangement in targeted 103/bcl2-hygro-derived cells. (a) Configuration of the wild-type and mutated kappa  alleles in four different targeted subclones of the rearrangement-inducible 103/bcl2-hygro cell line. Primers used for analysis of kappa  rearrangement are indicated. (b) Rearrangement is assessed by quantitative PCR performed at different time points after shifting to the nonpermissive temperature, followed by restriction enzyme digestion of allele-specific sites: StyI for the wild-type allele and EcoRI for the mutant allele. StyI- and EcoRI-digested products are quantified in Table II.

                              
View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 

Table II
Wild-type/Mutated Allele Rearrangement in 103/bcl2-hygroR Clones

Rearrangement levels were quantified by PCR at several time points after induction (Table II). In the cell line carrying the 4-kb deletion on one kappa  allele (clone 7.1.18.3), there was a strong decrease of the rearrangement level of the mutated allele when compared to the wild-type allele (24:76 at 48 h). This indicates that the deletion gives similar results in the cell line and in mice. The control loxP clone (7.1.18.9) showed no difference between the two alleles, confirming the neutrality of the two loxP inserted in the kappa  locus on the induction of rearrangement.

The KI-KII mutation alone in clone 19.3.9.10 showed no significant effect on rearrangement of the modified allele 48-96 h after induction. A small difference favoring the KI-KII mutation-bearing allele was seen in this clone 12- 24 h after induction (see Table II), but these differences did not stay consistent at later points of the assay. Accordingly, in the cell line carrying both the deletion and the KI-KII mutation, the reduction in rearrangement was identical to the one obtained with the sole 4-kb deletion (clone 19.3.9.14, 24:76 at 48 h). Altogether, these results suggest that in this particular in vitro model the 4-kb deletion mimics the effect obtained with the corresponding mutated mice. On the other hand, the regulatory mechanism involving the KI-KII motif could be nonoperative in these conditions.

Germline Transcription in the 103/bcl2-hygroR Pre-B Cell Line Clones.

Overall expression levels of long germline transcripts increased upon induction at the nonpermissive temperature at 6 h in the 103/bcl2-hygroR pre-B cell line (Fig. 4) and started to decrease at 12 h when rearrangement levels start to increase (see Fig. 3).


View larger version (30K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 4.   Effect of the 4-kb deletion on induction of germline transcription in targeted 103/4 subclones. Germline transcription is analyzed by RT-PCR at several time points after shifting to the nonpermissive temperature and intensity of PCR products (arbitrary units), after normalization for beta -actin expression level, plotted against time in h. (a) Control clone bearing the two loxP sites on one allele. (b) Deletion clone carrying the 4-kb deletion. open circle , mutated allele; bullet , wild-type allele. Mean values were calculated from two different experiments with error bars. (c) Raw RT-PCR results for a typical experiment performed before and 6 h after induction. Two bands are obtained for the control clone with the wt-5'-primer as both alleles are amplified, whereas only the wild-type allele can be amplified with this primer in the deletion clone. In both clones only the mutated allele can be amplified with the loxP-5'-primer.

The 4-kb deleted fragment contains the promoter of the long germline transcript. Long germline transcripts were expressed at similar levels from the wild-type and loxP-bearing alleles in the control clone 19.3.9.10 (Fig. 4). Analysis of transcription initiating upstream from the loxP site on the allele carrying the 4-kb deletion in the 19.3.9.14 deletion clone showed negligible amounts of RT-PCR product, indicating that the deletion did not force an ectopical initiation of transcription upstream of the 5' boundary of the deleted fragment. Moreover, the presence of the loxP site near KI-KII had no effect of transcription of the long germline transcript.

    Discussion
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References

Here we show that a deletion of 4 kb immediately upstream of the KI-KII sites in the kappa  V-J intervening sequence results in a dramatic reduction of rearrangement in cis in mouse spleen B lymphocytes heterozygous for the mutation. When added to the 4-kb deletion, mutations of the KI-KII sites, which had been previously characterized as enhancers of rearrangement, further decreased rearrangement, leading to the almost exclusive use of the unmutated allele. These results clearly demonstrate that a second positive regulatory element of rearrangement is located in the 4-kb fragment adjacent to KI-KII and that both elements must act in concert to enhance rearrangement of the locus.

The same mutations were introduced by homologous recombination of one kappa  allele in the rearrangement-inducible 103/bcl2-hygroR cell line. This pre-B cell line, which has been transformed with a temperature-sensitive Abelson virus mutant, has both heavy chain alleles rearranged nonproductively and initiates rearrangement of the light chain loci when put at a nonpermissive temperature. As in normal pre-B cells, rearrangement initiates in the 103 cell line on one kappa  allele, but in the absence of a feedback inhibition of the recombinase it then proceeds to the other allele and to the lambda  locus if the cell is maintained at the nonpermissive temperature for 48 h (13). A reduction of rearrangement was obtained for the allele carrying the 4-kb deletion in the 103/bcl2-hygroR cell line, quantitatively similar to the reduction observed in mutant mice. Several results have been obtained that imply germline transcription as a prerequisite event to rearrangement. When tested in the 103/bcl2-hygroR cell line, transcription of the long germline transcript could only be induced from the unmutated allele upon induction of rearrangement. Therefore, it is highly probable that the effect we have observed with the 4-kb mutation is due to the deletion of the promoter of the long germline transcript, but one cannot exclude that this segment may contain additional regulatory elements. On the other hand, the KI-KII mutation did not alter the efficiency of rearrangement in the 103 cell line, contrary to the result obtained in vivo. It has been shown that the KI-KII motifs can bind the transcription factor Pax-5 (18). This factor also binds a locus control region located at the 3' end of the IgH locus (19, 20), and seems to be involved in VH gene accessibility before the VH-DJH rearrangement step. We have found Pax-5 expression in the 103 cell line (data not shown), but specific cofactors (21) necessary for the KI-KII enhancement effect may nevertheless be absent from this cell line.

In the context of the regulation of allelic exclusion that starts by initiating rearrangement on one chromosome, one can envision that a limited balanced set of positive and negative factors present during a short window of development may control accessibility to one allele only. These factors will bind at the promoter and the enhancer regions but also at some specific sites in the V-(D)-J intervening segments (4, 22) or upstream of the V regions (25, 26). Alternatively, only one allele per progenitor could be accessible to the recombinase if it is marked by a modification enzyme as recently proposed (27) or by a specific anatomical location in the nucleus. It has been shown recently that in double positive thymic cells the excluded beta  allele was mostly hypomethylated and transcriptionally active (28). This result would fit better with a repression of the silent allele in the second phase of the allelic exclusion process than with a regulation operating via methylation. The 103/bcl2-hygroR cell line may be a valuable tool to address such issues.

    Footnotes

Address correspondence to Laurentiu Cocea, Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Unité 373, Faculté de Médecine Necker, 156 rue de Vaugirard, 75730 Paris Cedex 15, France. Phone: 33-1-4061-5384; Fax: 33-1-4061-5590; E-mail: cocea{at}necker.fr

Received for publication 23 December 1998 and in revised form 18 February 1999.

   L. Cocea was supported by a fellowship from La Fondation pour la Recherche Médicale and Le Rayon Vert, and S. Fillatreau was supported by École Normale Supérieure.
   M. Saghatchian's present address is Département d'Anatomo-Pathologie, Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France, and Simon Fillatreau's is ICAPB, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
1   Abbreviations used in this paper: BCR, B cell receptor; ES, embryonic stem; RT, reverse transcription.

We thank Hua Gu for the pLZ-neoR plasmid used in making the constructs for homologous recombination; Ralf Kühn (Institut für Genetik, Universität zu Köln, Köln, Germany) for the E14.1 embryonic stem cells; Stanley J. Korsmeyer for providing the plasmid pSFFV-Neo containing the human bcl2 gene; Naomi Rosenberg (Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA) for the 103 cells; Brian Van Ness for plasmid pSPIg8; Benedita Rocha and her group for antibodies and help with purifying the mutant cell populations; and Corinne Garcia for cell sorting.

    References
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods
Results
Discussion
References

1. Sleckman, B.P., J.R. Gorman, and F.W. Alt. 1996. Accessibility control of antigen-receptor variable-region gene assembly: role of cis-acting elements. Annu. Rev. Immunol. 14: 459-481 [Medline].
2. Chen, J., and F.W. Alt. 1993. Gene rearrangement and B-cell development. Curr. Opin. Immunol. 5: 194-200 [Medline].
3. Schlissel, M.S., and P. Stanhope-Baker. 1997. Accessibility and the developmental regulation of V(D)J recombination. Semin. Immunol. 9: 161-170 [Medline].
4. Villey, I., D. Caillol, F. Selz, P. Ferrier, and J.P. de Villartay. 1996. Defect in rearrangement of the most 5' TCR-J alpha following targeted deletion of T early alpha (TEA): implications for TCR alpha locus accessibility. Immunity. 5: 331-342 [Medline].
5. Kallenbach, S., C. Babinet, S. Pournin, P. Cavelier, M. Goodhardt, and F. Rougeon. 1993. The intronic immunoglobulin kappa gene enhancer acts independently on rearrangement and on transcription. Eur. J. Immunol. 23: 1917-1921 [Medline].
6. Okada, A., M. Mendelsohn, and F.W. Alt. 1994. Differential activation of transcription versus recombination of transgenic T cell receptor beta  variable region gene segments in B and T lineage cells. J. Exp. Med. 180: 261-272 [Abstract].
7. Alvarez, J.D., S.J. Anderson, and D.Y. Loh. 1995. V(D)J recombination and allelic exclusion of a TCR beta-chain minilocus occurs in the absence of a functional promoter. J. Immunol. 155: 1191-1202 [Abstract].
8. Fernex, C., M. Capone, and P. Ferrier. 1995. The V(D)J recombinational and transcriptional activities of the immunoglobulin heavy-chain intronic enhancer can be mediated through distinct protein-binding sites in a transgenic substrate. Mol. Cell. Biol. 15: 3217-3226 [Abstract].
9. Weaver, D., and D. Baltimore. 1987. B lymphocyte-specific protein binding near an immunoglobulin kappa-chain gene J segment. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 84: 1516-1520 [Abstract].
10. Ferradini, L., H. Gu, A. De Smet, K. Rajewsky, C.-A. Reynaud, and J.-C. Weill. 1996. Rearrangement-enhancing element upstream of the mouse immunoglobulin kappa chain J cluster. Science. 271: 1416-1420 [Abstract].
11. Van Ness, B.G., M. Weigert, C. Coleclough, E.L. Mather, D.E. Kelley, and R.P. Perry. 1981. Transcription of the unrearranged mouse C kappa locus: sequence of the initiation region and comparison of activity with a rearranged V kappa-C kappa gene. Cell. 27: 593-602 [Medline].
12. Martin, D.J., and B.G. Van Ness. 1990. Initiation and processing of two kappa immunoglobulin germ line transcripts in mouse B cells. Mol. Cell. Biol. 10: 1950-1958 [Medline].
13. Chen, Y.Y., L.C. Wang, M.S. Huang, and N. Rosenberg. 1994. An active v-abl protein tyrosine kinase blocks immunoglobulin light-chain gene rearrangement. Genes Dev. 8: 688-697 [Abstract].
14. Mansour, S.L., K.P. Thomas, and M.R. Capecchi. 1988. Disruption of the proto-oncogene int-2 in mouse embryo-derived stem cells: a general strategy for targeting mutations to non-selectable genes. Nature. 336: 348-352 [Medline].
15. Bernard, H.U., G. Krammer, and W.G. Rowekamp. 1985. Construction of a fusion gene that confers resistance against hygromycin B to mammalian cells in culture. Exp. Cell Res. 158: 237-243 [Medline].
16. Schlissel, M.S., and D. Baltimore. 1989. Activation of immunoglobulin kappa gene rearrangement correlates with induction of germline kappa gene transcription. Cell. 58: 1001-1007 [Medline].
17. Ramsden, D.A., and M. Gellert. 1995. Formation and resolution of double-strand break intermediates in V(D)J rearrangement. Genes Dev. 9: 2409-2420 [Abstract].
18. Tian, J., T. Okabe, T. Miyazaki, S. Takeshiba, and A. Kudo. 1997. Pax-5 is identical to EBB-1/KLP and binds to the VpreB and lambda 5 promoters as well as the KI and KII sites upstream of the Jkappa genes. Eur. J. Immunol. 27: 750-755 [Medline].
19. Madisen, L., and M. Groudine. 1994. Identification of a locus control region in the immunoglobulin heavy-chain locus that deregulates c-myc expression in plasmacytoma and Burkitt's lymphoma cells. Genes Dev. 15: 2212-2226 .
20. Michaelson, J.S., M. Singh, and B.K. Birshtein. 1996. B cell lineage-specific activator protein (BSAP). A player at multiple stages of B cell development. J. Immunol. 156: 2349-2351 [Abstract].
21. Fitzsimmons, D., W. Hodsdon, W. Wheat, S.M. Maira, B. Wasylyk, and J. Hagman. 1996. Pax-5 (BSAP) recruits Ets proto-oncogene family proteins to form functional ternary complexes on a B-cell-specific promoter. Genes Dev. 10: 2198-2211 [Abstract].
22. Lauster, R., C.-A. Reynaud, I.-L. Mårtensson, A. Peter, D. Bucchini, J. Jami, and J.-C. Weill. 1993. Promoter, enhancer and silencer elements regulate rearrangement of an immunoglobulin transgene. EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J. 12: 4615-4623 [Abstract].
23. Cavelier, P., F. Nato, I. Coquilleau, A. Rolink, F. Rougeon, and M. Goodhardt. 1997. B lineage-restricted rearrangement of a human Ig kappa transgene. Eur. J. Immunol. 27: 1626-1631 [Medline].
24. Cocea, L., A. Dahan, L. Ferradini, C.-A. Reynaud, and J.-C. Weill. 1998. Negative regulation of Ig gene rearrangement by a 150-bp transcriptional silencer. Eur. J. Immunol. 28: 2809-2816 [Medline].
25. Clausell, A., and P.W. Tucker. 1994. Functional analysis of the V gamma 3 promoter of the murine gamma delta T-cell receptor. Mol. Cell. Biol. 14: 803-814 [Abstract].
26. Baker, J.E., D. Cado, and D.H. Raulet. 1998. Developmentally programmed rearrangement of T cell receptor Vgamma genes is controlled by sequences immediately upstream of the Vgamma genes. Immunity. 9: 159-168 [Medline].
27. Mostoslavsky, R., N. Singh, A. Kirillov, R. Pelanda, H. Cedar, A. Chess, and Y. Bergman. 1998. Kappa chain monoallelic demethylation and the establishment of allelic exclusion. Genes Dev. 12: 1801-1811 [Abstract/Free Full Text].
28. Chattopadhyay, S., C.E. Whitehurst, F. Schwenk, and J. Chen. 1998. Biochemical and functional analyses of chromatin changes at the TCR-beta gene locus during CD4-CD8- to CD4+CD8+ thymocyte differentiation. J. Immunol. 160: 1256-1267 [Abstract/Free Full Text].

Copyright © 1999 by The Rockefeller University Press.
0022-1007/99/05/1443/08 $2.00