Regulation of B Lymphocyte Development by the Truncated Immunoglobulin Heavy Chain Protein Dµ

By Ulla-Carin Tornberg,* Ingela Bergqvist,* Matthias Haury,Dagger and Dan Holmberg*Dagger

From the * Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Umeå University, S-901 87 Umeå, Sweden; and the Dagger  Department of Immunology, Institut Pasteur, 750 15 Paris, Cedex 15, France

    Abstract
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results & Discussion
References

The development of B lymphocytes from progenitor cells is dependent on the expression of a pre-B cell-specific receptor made up by a µ heavy chain associated with the surrogate light chains, immunoglobulin (Ig)alpha , and Igbeta . A variant pre-B cell receptor can be formed in which the µ heavy chain is exchanged for a truncated µ chain denoted Dµ. To investigate the role of this receptor in the development of B cells, we have generated transgenic mice that express the Dµ protein in cells of the B lineage. Analysis of these mice reveal that Dµ expression leads to a partial block in B cell development at the early pre-B cell stage, probably by inhibiting VH to DHJH rearrangement. Furthermore, we provide evidence that Dµ induces VL to JL rearrangements.

    Introduction
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results & Discussion
References

During B cell differentiation, the genes encoding the heavy and light chains of the immunoglobulin molecules are assembled from germline gene segments in an ordered fashion (1, 2). Initially, a DH segment is joined to a JH segment in the heavy chain locus on both chromosomes. Subsequently, a VH gene segment is rearranged to the DHJH complex. If this renders a functional rearrangement, a µ heavy chain is expressed on the cell surface, together with the surrogate light chains encoded by the genes lambda 5 and Vpre-B (3). This complex, denoted the pre-B cell receptor (pBCR),1 has been shown to be of vital importance for maturation of B lymphocytes. Thus, in mice deficient in this receptor, B cell differentiation is arrested at an early stage (6). Moreover, the pBCR gives a signal to the cell to stop further rearrangements on the heavy chain locus (10) and to upregulate rearrangement of the light chain gene segments (14, 15). Due to an inexact joining mechanism, the DH can be rearranged to the JH in three possible reading frames (RFs). A majority of the DH segments carry their own promoter and an ATG translational initiation codon. When the DH is rearranged to a JH in RF2, according to the nomenclature of Ichihara et al. (16), this DHJH complex can be translated into a truncated µ chain, denoted Dµ (17). A well-documented underrepresentation of RF2 in VHDHJH as well as DHJH joints (18) has been suggested to be mediated by this protein expressed on the cell surface (19). The mechanism by which this occurs is, however, unknown. It has been postulated that the Dµ protein in association with the surrogate light chains (Dµ pBCR) possess signalling properties similar to those given by the pBCR, including signals mediating allelic exclusion (21). If so, cells expressing the Dµ protein on the cell surface would be arrested at an early developmental stage due to the absence of a complete µ heavy chain.

To investigate the effect of Dµ expression on B cell differentiation, we generated mice transgenic for the Dµ protein under control of its endogenous promoter (Dµ-endo) or, alternatively, under control of the pre-B cell and B cell- specific mb-1 promoter (Dµ-mb-1; references 25).

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

Transgenic Constructs.

The Dµ transgenic constructs were created by PCR amplification of DHJH rearrangements, using DNA from large pre-B cells as template. The primers (Fig. 1 A, a and b) hybridize to sequences 0.42 kb 5' of the DH segment and 0.62 kb 3' of JH4, respectively. The PCR products were sequenced, and a fragment consisting of DFL16.1 joined to JH4 in RF2 was cut with NotI and EcoRI, and cloned into pBluescript. A second construct in which the endogenous promoter was replaced with the mb-1 promoter, was generated by PCR amplification using primers c and b (Fig. 1 A), and the fragment was cut with BamHI/EcoRI and cloned into pBluescript containing the mb-1 promoter. The 0.3-kb fragment containing the mb-1 promoter was isolated by PCR according to the published sequence (27). Next, the plasmids were cut with Xba1 and Xho1, and ligated with a 9.8-kb XbaI-XhoI fragment from the plasmid p21-H22 (10), provided by Dr. T. Leandersson (University of Lund, Lund, Sweden), containing the complete membrane heavy chain constant region. The plasmids containing the final constructs were digested with NotI and XhoI, the inserts were gel purified and injected into fertilized oocytes of F1(C57BL/6 × CBA) mice. The injected zygotes were transplanted into oviducts of pseudopregnant female mice. Tail DNA from offspring was digested with BamHI, and a 0.3-kb probe comprising the Cµ1 exon was used for Southern blot, detecting a band of 6.2/6.5 kb in transgenic mice (Fig. 1 B).


View larger version (32K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 1.   (A) Schematic outline of the transgenic constructs used. The Dµ-endo construct included a 0.3-kb fragment containing the endogenous promoter (open box), a DFLJH4 rearrangement in RF2, the IgH enhancer (E), and the complete Cµ sequence. Arrowheads, the location of PCR primers used to generate the constructs. The probe used for Southern blot analysis is depicted in the figure together with the size of the BamHI fragment detected in transgenic mice (6.5 kb). The construct used to create Dµ- mb-1 transgenic mice was derived from the Dµ-endo construct by replacing the region upstream of the ATG with a 0.3-kb fragment containing the mb-1 promoter (shaded box). B, BamHI; N, NotI; R, EcoRI; Xb, XbaI; Xh, XhoI. (B) Southern blot analysis of genomic tail DNA digested with BamHI and hybridized with Cµ exon 1 as a probe. The 6.5-kb Dµ transgenic band and the ~10-kb band representing the endogenous Cµ locus are indicated. Lane 1, C57/BL6; lane 2, Dµ-endo, founder 13; lane 3, Dµ-mb-1, founder 23. The transgenic band in lane 3 is 0.3 kb shorter than in lane 2, due to the insertion of a BamHI site 3'of the mb1 promoter in the construct. (C) Northern blot analysis of total RNA from bone marrow and spleen cells hybridized with a probe complementary to the DHJH joint used in the constructs. Blots from transgenic (tg) mice and littermate controls (lm) are shown. Lanes 1, 2, 5, and 6: Dµ-mb-1 line 26. Lanes 3, 4, 7, and 8: Dµ-endo line 11. The 1.9-kb Dµ transcript and the 18 S ribosomal RNA are indicated in the figure. GAPDH was used as a control for quantification. (D) Expression of the Dµ protein in transgenic mice. Proteins extracted from bone marrow or spleen cells were analyzed by Western blot. A band of ~69 kD was detected in transgenic mice using an anti-IgM antibody. Blots representing transgenic (tg) mice and littermate controls (lm) are shown. Dµ-mb-1, lanes 1, 2, 5, and 6; Dµ-endo, lanes 3, 4, 7, and 8. (E ) VHDHJH and DHJH rearrangements in Dµ-endo transgenic mice. B220+CD43+ pre-B cells were isolated by cell sorting from transgenic mice (tg) and from littermate controls (lm). Semiquantitative PCR (28) was performed using a primer hybridizing to a sequence downstream of JH2, together with primers complementary to either recombination sequences 5'of all D regions or to members of the J558 family. As the target sequence for the JH primer is not included in the transgenic construct, there is no amplification of the transgene itself. Limited PCR amplification of a nonrearranging locus (lambda 5) was used to normalize the DNA content in the reactions. PCR products were hybridized with a probe complementary to the JH1 and JH2 exons, or to the lambda 5 gene. The upper and lower panels show rearrangements to the JH1 and the JH2 gene segments, respectively.

PCR Amplifications and Southern Blot Analysis.

PCR amplifications performed to isolate the gene fragments used for the transgenic vectors were carried out over 30 cycles (1 min at 95°C, 1 min at 55°C, and 2 min at 72°C) in a programmable thermal controller (PTC-100; MJ Research Inc., Watertown, MA), using DynaZyme II DNA polymerase (Finnzymes Oy, Espoo, Finland) with the supplied buffer. The following primers were used for PCR amplification: (a) 5'-CGCGCGGCCGCTCAAAGCACAATGCCTGG-3', (b) 5'-GGAATTCCTTCTAATATTCCATACACATA-3', and (c) 5'-AAGGATCCATGACAACTGAAACTCAACC-3'.

Quantification of IgH chain rearrangements were performed according to Costa et al. (28). In brief, DNA was prepared by lysing 4-16 × 104 CD43+, B220+, IgM- cells in 200 µl lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 100 mM EDTA, 100 mM NaCl, 1% SDS, and 60 µg/ml proteinase K), incubating them at 55°C for 2 h, and then precipitating the DNA with isopropanol. The DNA was dissolved in water, and used for PCR at a concentration of ~5-20 ng/reaction. PCR amplifications were carried out for 30 cycles (30 s at 95°C, 2 min at 55°C, and 1 min and 45 s at 72°C) in a programmable thermal controller (PTC-100; MJ Research Inc.), using DynaZyme II DNA polymerase (Finnzymes Oy) with the supplied buffer. Limited PCR amplification of a nonrearranging locus (lambda 5) was used to normalize the DNA content in the reactions. The following primers, at a concentration of 100 ng/reaction, were used for PCR amplification: JH: 5'-GGCTCCCAATGACCCTTTCTG, DH: 5'-GTCAAGGGATCTACTACTGTG, VJ558: 5'-TCCTCCAGCACAGCCTACATG, 5'lambda 5: 5'-CAAGTCTGACCCCTTGGTCACTC, 3'lambda 5: 5'-TGTGAGGCATCCACTGGTCAGATA. One-tenth of the 50 µl PCR reaction was run on a 1.7% agarose gel, blotted onto Zeta-Probe GT blotting membranes (BioRad, Hercules, CA) and hybridized with a 510-bp probe spanning the JH1 and JH2 exons (for detection of DHJH and VHDHJH rearrangements) or a 690-bp probe (29; provided by Dr. L. Mårtensson, University of Lund, Lund, Sweden) for detection of lambda 5. Intensity of the bands was determined using a Phosphor Imager (Molecular Dynamics, Sunnyvale, CA).

Northern Blot Analysis.

Total RNA from spleen and BM was isolated using Ultraspec RNA isolation system (Biotecx, Houston, TX). The RNA was electrophoresed in a 1.2% agarose/ formaldehyde gel, transferred to Zeta-Probe GT blotting membranes (BioRad), and hybridized according to the manufacturer's recommendations. A 0.8-kb fragment from the transgene construct, spanning the DHJH complex, was used as a probe to detect Dµ transcripts. kappa  transcripts were detected using a 0.4-kb fragment comprising the 3' portion of the Ckappa gene, and a 0.9-kb probe containing part of the mouse mb-1 gene (25; provided by Dr. Michael Reth, Institute for Biology III, Freiburg, Germany) was used to determine the amount of B cell-derived RNA in the samples.

Western Blot Analysis.

Proteins were prepared by lysing 3-10 × 106 cells from bone marrow, or from spleen, in 100 µl sample buffer (135 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8, 2.5% SDS, 10% glycerol, 10% 2-mercaptoethanol, and bromophenolblue indicator [BFB]) and applying the suspension to a 5-15% SDS-PAGE gradient gel. Fractionated proteins were electroblotted onto Immobilon-P transfer membranes (Millipore Corp., Bedford, MA) using a Trans-Blot cell (BioRad). Immunodetection of the Dµ chain was carried out using a horseradish peroxidase-labeled anti-IgM antibody (Southern Biotechnology Associates, Birmingham, AL) and an ECL Western blotting kit (Amersham Corp., Arlington Heights, IL) according to the manufacturer's protocol.

Flow Cytometry Analysis and Cell Sorting.

Bone marrow cells were flushed out of the femurs with HBSS. Spleen cells were obtained by homogenization of the organ in the same medium. Cells were collected by centrifugation, resuspended in FACS medium (3% fetal calf serum and 0.1% sodium azide in PBS), counted, and 106 cells/25 µl were incubated with antibodies. The antibodies used were: biotin-coupled anti-B220 RA3.6.B2 (30), FITC-labeled anti-IgM (Southern Biotechnology Associates), FITC-labeled anti-CD43 (PharMingen, San Diego, CA), biotin-coupled anti-heat stable antigen (HSA) (PharMingen), and streptavidin PE-labeled anti-BP-1 (PharMingen). PE- and Cy-chrome-conjugated streptavidin were obtained from PharMingen. Stained cells were analyzed on a FACSCalibur® (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, CA). For cell sorting, bone marrow cells were stained with the same reagents and separated on a FACStar Plus® (Becton Dickinson).

    Results and Discussion
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results & Discussion
References
Dµ Expression Leads to Arrest in VH to DH  JH Rearrangements.

Five founder transgenic mouse lines were established expressing Dµ under the control of the endogenous DH promoter, and four lines were established with Dµ expression controlled by the mb-1 promoter (25-27; Fig. 1 A). Each of the founder mice were crossed to C57BL/6 mice and were analyzed for integration of the transgene by genomic Southern blots using a probe hybridizing to the Cµ1 exon (Fig. 1 B). Transcription of transgenic Dµ in splenic and bone marrow cells from transgenic mice was demonstrated by Northern blot analysis (Fig. 1 C). Western blot analysis of cell lysates was used to confirm the expression of transgenic Dµ protein. Thus, Dµ protein was readily detected in bone marrow cells and in spleen cells from transgenic, but not from littermate mice (Fig. 1 D). To directly test if the expression of Dµ protein would affect the VHDHJH rearrangement process, the relative amount of complete VHDHJH and of incomplete DHJH rearrangements was estimated in B220+CD43+ early B cell progenitors using a semiquantitative PCR assay (28). As illustrated in Fig. 1 E, the relative amount of complete VHDHJH rearrangements was found to be severely reduced in the transgenic mice compared to littermate controls. In contrast, DJH rearrangements were more abundant in the transgenic mice. Together, these data provide evidence for that expression of the Dµ protein mediates inhibition of VH to DJH rearrangements.

Partial B Cell Depletion in Dµ Transgenic Mice.

To study the effect of the transgenically expressed Dµ protein on the B cell compartment, newborn liver, bone marrow, and spleen cells from two transgenic lines were analyzed by flow cytometry. Analysis of B lymphocytes from newborn mice revealed an ~3- and 15-fold reduction of IgM positive cells in the liver (Table 1, Fig. 2). In 3-wk-old mice, B cell numbers were reduced about fourfold in transgenic mice compared to littermate controls (Table 1). In adult spleen, the number of total B cells was approximately twofold lower in the transgenic mice (Table 1), whereas the T cells numbers were apparently unchanged (data not shown). At all time points analyzed, no significant difference in the proportion of CD5+ and CD5- B cells in the peritoneum was observed, indicating that the generation of B-1 cells and of conventional B cells were similarly affected by the transgenic Dµ expression (data not shown).

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

Table 1
Number of IgM+ B Cells and of Total Nucleated Cells


View larger version (53K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 2.   Flow cytometric analysis of newborn liver and bone marrow cells from Dµ-endo transgenic mice, Dµ-mb-1 transgenic mice, and littermate controls. Cells were stained with anti-B220-PE and anti-IgM-FITC and analyzed on FACScan®. The lymphocyte population was gated according to standard forward- and side-scatter values. The numbers above the framed areas represent the percentage of B220+IgM- and B220+IgM+ cells out of the total number of gated lymphocytes.

Impairment of B Cell Differentiation in Dµ Transgenic Mice Occurs at the Pro/Pre B Cell Stage.

To identify the stage at which the B cell development was affected by the transgenic expression of Dµ, bone marrow cells from adult mice were analyzed by flow cytometry. The number of immature and mature B cells (B220+IgM+) was diminished approximately two- to threefold in transgenic mice, whereas the B220+IgM- population, including most B cell progenitors, was similar or only slightly reduced compared to littermate controls (Fig. 2).

The stages of B cell differentiation have been subdivided into fractions (A-F) on the basis of expression of the cell surface markers B220, CD43, HSA, BP-1, and IgM (31). Analysis of bone marrow cells using these markers revealed that the B220+CD43+ early progenitors were slightly increased in transgenic mice, whereas B220+CD43- cells were fourfold reduced compared to littermate controls (Fig. 3). These results suggested that the observed block in B cell development induced by Dµ expression occurs before the transition of late pro-B cells to the pre-B cell stage.


View larger version (45K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 3.   Flow cytometric analysis of bone marrow cells from 3-wk-old Dµ-endo transgenic mice, Dµ-mb-1 transgenic mice, and littermate controls. (A) FACS® profiles of cells stained with anti-CD43 and anti-B220 and analyzed on FACScan®. The lymphocyte population was gated according to standard forward- and side-scatter values. The numbers above the framed areas represent the percentage of B220+CD43- and B220+CD43+ cells out of the total number of gated lymphocytes. (B) Numbers of B220+CD43- and B220+CD43+ cells per femur displayed as histogram plots.

To further dissect at what point in early B cell differentiation Dµ expression exerts its effect, BP-1, CD43, and HSA expression was used to subdivide B cell progenitor cell populations (31). As shown in Fig. 4, the CD43intBP1+ cell population (late pro-B cells) was slightly increased in transgenic mice compared to littermate controls. However, although the number of CD43intBP1+ cells with low expression of HSA was almost twofold higher in the transgenic versus wild-type mice, the number of CD43intBP1+ cells with high level expression of HSA was similar. Thus, the partial block in B cell development induced in the Dµ transgenic mice occurs at the transition of the fraction C to the fraction C' in the nomenclature of Hardy et al. (31), i.e., at the developmental stage where µ chain expression on the cell surface is required for further differentiation.


View larger version (39K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 4.   Flow cytometric analysis of bone marrow cells from 3-wk-old Dµ-endo transgenic mice, Dµ-mb-1 transgenic mice, and littermate controls. (A) FACS® profiles of cells stained with anti-CD43, anti-BP-1, and anti-HSA, and analyzed on FACScan®. The lymphocyte population was gated according to standard forward and side-scatter values. Cells expressing BP-1 and intermediate levels of CD43 (indicated as a framed population) were analyzed for HSA expression and are displayed as a separate histogram. (B) Numbers of CD43+, BP-1+, HSAhigh and CD43+, BP-1+, HSAlow cells per femur are displayed as histogram plots.

Our results provide support for the hypothesis that the Dµ pBCR can mediate a block in B cell development, probably by inhibiting further VH to DHJH rearrangement (32, 33) similar to the pBCR (10). This mechanism appears, however, to allow leakage of cells that can complete VHDHJH rearrangement in the presence of Dµ expression. This is not surprising in view of the observed production of endogenous rearrangements in transgenic mice expressing a IgH chain (10). It is predicted from the proposed action of Dµ expression that most or all of these mature B cells should contain only one complete VHDHJH rearrangement. Experiments addressing this issue are presently ongoing.

Dµ Induces Light Chain Rearrangements.

In addition to inhibiting VH to DHJH rearrangements, Dµ expression has been suggested to mediate induction of VL to JL rearrangements (21, 32). If so, progenitor B cells of the Dµ transgenic mice would be expected to rearrange the light chain locus despite the arrest in B cell development and the possible impairment of VH to DHJH rearrangements. To test this hypothesis, we analyzed the levels of expression of kappa  chain messenger RNA in bone marrow cells. The levels of kappa  transcripts were found to be similar in transgenic mice compared to littermate controls (Fig. 5). Since in transgenic mice there is a three- to four-fold reduction in the B cell progenitors that normally produce L chain transcripts, these results suggest that Dµ expression induces VL to JL in progenitors that normally would contain the light chain loci in germline configuration. It appears, thus, that Dµ can replace the complete µH chain in terms of mediating induction of VL to JL rearrangements.


View larger version (67K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 5.   Northern blot analysis of total RNA from bone marrow and spleen cells hybridized with a probe complementary to the Ckappa . Blots from transgenic (tg) mice and wild-type littermates (lm) are shown. Lanes 1, 2, 5, and 6: Dµ-mb-1 line 26. Lanes 3, 4, 7, and 8: Dµ-endo line 11. The kappa  transcript is indicated in the figure. mb-1 was used as a control for quantification.

We conclude from these results that the Dµ pBCR can mediate a block in B cell development, probably by inhibiting VH to DHJH rearrangements, as well as inducing VL to JL rearrangements. In contrast, Dµ cannot substitute for the requirement of µH chain expression for pre-B cell transition. These observations are in agreement with previous reports demonstrating that Dµ counterselection is mediated through the transmembrane domain of the membrane Dµ protein (33) and is dependent on the expression of Igbeta (23) and Syk (22). It has been suggested that the inability of Dµ to mediate pre-B cell transition would be due to a failure to pair with L chains (24). This explanation seems unlikely, however, because counterselection of the Dµ protein-encoding RF2 appears to occur before the stage of L chain expression (34). An alternative explanation may be that the Dµ pBCR and the pBCR generate qualitatively different signals (12). Further analysis of the Dµ transgenic mice will be able to directly assess this possibility.

    Footnotes

Received for publication 4 September 1997 and in revised form 18 December 1997.

   We thank Drs. A. Cumano, J. Demengeot, B. Eriksson, and P. Perreira for discussions and for reviewing the manuscript.
   This work was supported by a grant from the Swedish Natural Science Research Council.
   Address correspondence to Dan Holmberg, Department of Immunology, Institut Pasteur, 25 rue de Dr. Roux, 750 15 Paris Cedex 15, France. Phone: 33-1-4568-8543 Fax: 33-1-4568-8921; E-mail: holmberg{at}pasteur.fr
1   Abbreviations used in this paper: HSA, heat stable antigen; pBCR, pre-B cell receptor; RF, reading frame.
   I. Bergqvist and U.-C. Tornberg contributed equally to this work.
    References
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results & Discussion
References

1. Tonegawa, S.. 1983. Somatic generation of antibody diversity. Nature. 302: 575-581 [Medline].
2. Alt, F.W., G.D. Yancopoulos, T.K. Blackwell, C. Wood, E. Thomas, M. Boss, R. Coffman, N. Rosenberg, S. Tonegawa, and D. Baltimore. 1984. Ordered rearrangement of immunoglobulin heavy chain variable region segments. EMBO (Eur. MOL. Biol. Organ.) J. 3: 1209-1219 [Abstract].
3. Pillai, S., and D. Baltimore. 1987. Formation of disulphide-linked µ2 omega 2 tetramers in pre-B cells by the 18K omega -immunoglobulin light chain. Nature. 329: 172-174 [Medline].
4. Karasuyama, H., A. Kudo, and F. Melchers. 1990. The proteins encoded by the VpreB and lambda 5 pre-B cell-specific genes can associate with each other and with µ heavy chain. J. Exp. Med. 172: 969-972 [Abstract].
5. Sakaguchi, N., and F. Melchers. 1986. lambda 5, a new light-chain- related locus selectively expressed in pre-B lymphocytes. Nature. 324: 579-582 [Medline].
6. Kitamura, D., J. Roes, R. Kühn, and K. Rajewsky. 1991. A B cell-deficient mouse by targeted disruption of the membrane exon of the immunoglobulin µ chain gene. Nature 350: 423-426 [Medline].
7. Shinkai, Y., G. Rathbun, K.P. Lam, E.M. Oltz, V. Stewart, M. Mendelsohn, J. Charron, M. Datta, F. Young, A.M. Stall, and F.W. Alt. 1992. RAG-2-deficient mice lack mature lymphocytes owing to inability to initiate V(D)J rearrangement. Cell. 68: 855-867 [Medline].
8. Mombaerts, P., J. Iacomini, R.S. Johnson, K. Herrup, S. Tonegawa, and V. E. Papaioannou. 1992. RAG-1-deficient mice have no mature B and T lymphocytes. Cell. 68: 869-877 [Medline].
9. Rolink, A., H. Karasuyama, U. Grawunder, D. Haasner, A. Kudo, and F. Melchers. 1993. B cell development in mice with a defective lambda 5 gene. Eur. J. Immunol. 23: 1284-1288 [Medline].
10. Rusconi, S., and G. Kohler. 1985. Transmission and expression of a specific pair of rearranged immunoglobulin µ and kappa  genes in a transgenic mouse line. Nature. 314: 330-334 [Medline].
11. Weaver, D., F. Costantini, K.T. Imanishi, and D. Baltimore. 1985. A transgenic immunoglobulin mu gene prevents rearrangement of endogenous genes. Cell. 42: 117-127 [Medline].
12. Nussenzweig, M.C., A.C. Shaw, E. Sinn, D.B. Danner, K.L. Holmes, H.C. Morse, and P. Leder. 1987. Allelic exclusion in transgenic mice that express the membrane form of immunoglobulin µ. Science. 236: 816-819 [Medline].
13. Manz, J., K. Denis, O. Witte, R. Brinster, and U. Storb. 1988. Feedback inhibition of immunoglobulin gene rearrangement by membrane µ, but not by secreted µ heavy chains. J. Exp. Med. 168: 1363-1381 [Abstract].
14. Reth, M., E. Petrac, P. Wiese, L. Lobel, and F.W. Alt. 1987. Activation of V kappa  gene rearrangement in pre-B cells follows the expression of membrane-bound immunoglobulin heavy chains. EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J. 6: 3299-3305 [Abstract].
15. Iglesias, A., M. Kopf, G.S. Williams, B. Buhler, and G. Kohler. 1991. Molecular requirements for the µ-induced light chain gene rearrangement in pre-B cells. EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J. 10: 2147-2155 [Abstract].
16. Ichihara, Y., H. Hayashida, S. Miyazawa, and Y. Kurosawa. 1989. Only DFL16, DSP2, and DQ52 gene families exist in mouse immunoglobulin heavy chain diversity gene loci, of which DFL16 and DSP2 originate from the same primordial DH gene. Eur. J. Immunol. 19: 1849-1854 [Medline].
17. Reth, M.G., and F.W. Alt. 1984. Novel immunoglobulin heavy chains are produced from DJH gene segment rearrangements in lymphoid cells. Nature. 312: 418-423 [Medline].
18. Meek, K.. 1990. Analysis of junctional diversity during B lymphocyte development. Science. 250: 820-823 [Medline].
19. Gu, H., D. Kitamura, and K. Rajewsky. 1991. DH reading frame bias: evolutionary selection, antigen selection or both? Evolutionary selection. Immunol. Today. 12: 420-421 [Medline].
20. Carlsson, L., C. Övermo, and D. Holmberg. 1992. Developmentally controlled selection of antibody genes: characterization of individual VH7183 genes and evidence for stage-specific somatic diversification. Eur. J. Immunol. 22: 71-78 [Medline].
21. Tsubata, T., R. Tsubata, and M. Reth. 1992. Crosslinking of the cell surface immunoglobulin (µ-surrogate light chains complex) on pre-B cells induces activation of V gene rearrangements at the immunoglobulin kappa  locus. Intern. Immunol. 4: 637-641 [Abstract].
22. Cheng, A.M., B. Rowley, W. Pao, A. Hayday, J.B. Bolen, and T. Pawson. 1995. Syk tyrosine kinase required for mouse viability and B-cell development. Nature. 378: 303-306 [Medline].
23. Gong, S., M. Sanchez, and M.C. Nussenzweig. 1996. Counterselection against Dµ is mediated through immunoglobulin (Ig)alpha -Igbeta . J. Exp. Med. 184: 2079-2084 [Abstract/Free Full Text].
24. Horne, M.C., P.E. Roth, and A.L. DeFranco. 1996. Assembly of the truncated immunoglobulin heavy chain Dµ into antigen receptor-like complexes in pre-B cells but not in B cells. Immunity. 4: 145-158 [Medline].
25. Sakaguchi, N., S. Kashiwamura, M. Kimoto, P. Thalmann, and F. Melchers. 1988. B lymphocyte lineage-restricted expression of mb-1, a gene with CD3-like structural properties. EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J. 7: 3457-3464 [Abstract].
26. Kashiwamura, S., T. Koyama, T. Matsuo, M. Steinmetz, M. Kimoto, and N. Sakaguchi. 1990. Structure of the murine mb-1 gene encoding a putative sIgM-associated molecule. J. Immunol. 145: 337-343 [Abstract/Free Full Text].
27. Travis, A., J. Hagman, and R. Grosschedl. 1991. Heterogeneously initiated transcription from the pre-B- and B-cell-specific mb-1 promoter: analysis of the requirement for upstream factor-binding sites and initiation site sequences. Mol. Cell. Biol. 11: 5756-5766 [Medline].
28. Costa, T.E.F., H. Suh, and M.C. Nussenzweig. 1992. Chromosomal position of rearranging gene segments influences allelic exclusion in transgenic mice. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 89: 2205-2208 [Abstract].
29. Kudo, A., N. Sakaguchi, and F. Melchers. 1987. Organization of the murine Ig-related lambda 5 gene transcribed selectively in pre-B lymphocytes. EMBO (Eur. Mol. Biol. Organ.) J. 6: 103-107 [Abstract].
30. Coffman, R.L.. 1982. Surface antigen expression and immunoglobulin gene rearrangement during mouse pre-B cell development. Immunol. Rev. 69: 5-23 [Medline].
31. Hardy, R.R., C.E. Carmack, S.A. Shinton, J.D. Kemp, and K. Hayakawa. 1991. Resolution and characterization of pro- B and pre-pro-B cell stages in normal mouse bone marrow. J. Exp. Med. 173: 1213-1225 [Abstract].
32. Reth, M.G., P. Ammirati, S. Jackson, and F.W. Alt. 1985. Regulated progression of a cultured pre-B-cell line to the B-cell stage. Nature. 317: 353-355 [Medline].
33. Gu, H., D. Kitamura, and K. Rajewsky. 1991. B cell development regulated by gene rearrangement: arrest of maturation by membrane-bound Dµ protein and selection of DH element reading frames. Cell. 65: 47-54 [Medline].
34. Loffert, D., A. Ehlich, W. Muller, and K. Rajewsky. 1996. Surrogate light chain expression is required to establish immunoglobulin heavy chain allelic exclusion during early B cell development. Immunity. 4: 133-144 [Medline].

Copyright © 1998 by The Rockefeller University Press.
0022-1007/98/03/703/07 $2.00