Genetic dissection of lupus pathogenesis: Sle3/5 impacts IgH CDR3 sequences, somatic mutations, and receptor editing

M Wakui, J Kim, EJ Butfiloski, L Morel… - The Journal of …, 2004 - journals.aai.org
M Wakui, J Kim, EJ Butfiloski, L Morel, ES Sobel
The Journal of Immunology, 2004journals.aai.org
Sle3/5 is a lupus susceptibility locus identified on mouse chromosome 7 of the New Zealand
Black/New Zealand White (NZB/NZW)-derived NZM2410 strain. Based on previous
observations, this locus appears to contribute to lupus pathogenesis through its impact on
diversification of immune responses. To understand how Sle3/5 affects somatic
diversification of humoral responses, we analyzed IgH rearrangements preferentially
encoding hapten-reactive IgG1 repertoires after immunization and assessed peripheral IgH …
Abstract
Sle3/5 is a lupus susceptibility locus identified on mouse chromosome 7 of the New Zealand Black/New Zealand White (NZB/NZW)-derived NZM2410 strain. Based on previous observations, this locus appears to contribute to lupus pathogenesis through its impact on diversification of immune responses. To understand how Sle3/5 affects somatic diversification of humoral responses, we analyzed IgH rearrangements preferentially encoding hapten-reactive IgG1 repertoires after immunization and assessed peripheral IgH VDJ recombination activities in C57BL/6 (B6) mice congenic for Sle3/5 (B6. Sle3/5). In addition to altered somatic V H mutation profiles, sequences from B6. Sle3/5 mice exhibited atypical IgH CDR3 structures characteristic of autoreactive B cells and consistent with peripheral B cells bearing putatively edited receptors. Significant expression of Rag genes and circular V H D gene excision products were detected in splenic mature B cells of B6. Sle3/5 but not B6 mice, showing that peripheral IgH rearrangements occurred beyond allelic exclusion. Taken together, on the nonautoimmune background, Sle3/5 affected V H DJ H junctional diversity and V H mutational diversity and led to recombinational activation of allelically excluded IgH genes in the periphery. Such impact on somatic IgH diversification may contribute to the development of autoreactive B cell repertoires. This is the first report to present evidence for significant association of a lupus susceptibility locus, which has been mapped to a chromosomal region in which no Ig genes have been identified, with somatic IgH sequence diversity and peripheral H chain receptor editing or revision without relying upon Ig transgene strategies.
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