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Ectopic T Cell Receptor-α Locus Control Region Activity in B Cells Is Suppressed by Direct Linkage to Two Flanking Genes at Once

The molecular mechanisms regulating the activity of the TCRα gene are required for the production of the circulating T cell repertoire. Elements of the mouse TCRα locus control region (LCR) play a role in these processes. We previously reported that TCRα LCR DNA supports a gene expression pattern th...

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Autores principales: Knirr, Stefan, Gomos-Klein, Janette, Andino, Blanca E., Harrow, Faith, Erhard, Karl F., Kovalovsky, Damian, Sant'Angelo, Derek B., Ortiz, Benjamin D.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2989920/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21124935
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015527
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author Knirr, Stefan
Gomos-Klein, Janette
Andino, Blanca E.
Harrow, Faith
Erhard, Karl F.
Kovalovsky, Damian
Sant'Angelo, Derek B.
Ortiz, Benjamin D.
author_facet Knirr, Stefan
Gomos-Klein, Janette
Andino, Blanca E.
Harrow, Faith
Erhard, Karl F.
Kovalovsky, Damian
Sant'Angelo, Derek B.
Ortiz, Benjamin D.
author_sort Knirr, Stefan
collection PubMed
description The molecular mechanisms regulating the activity of the TCRα gene are required for the production of the circulating T cell repertoire. Elements of the mouse TCRα locus control region (LCR) play a role in these processes. We previously reported that TCRα LCR DNA supports a gene expression pattern that mimics proper thymus-stage, TCRα gene-like developmental regulation. It also produces transcription of linked reporter genes in peripheral T cells. However, TCRα LCR-driven transgenes display ectopic transcription in B cells in multiple reporter gene systems. The reasons for this important deviation from the normal TCRα gene regulation pattern are unclear. In its natural locus, two genes flank the TCRα LCR, TCRα (upstream) and Dad1 (downstream). We investigated the significance of this gene arrangement to TCRα LCR activity by examining transgenic mice bearing a construct where the LCR was flanked by two separate reporter genes. Surprisingly, the presence of a second, distinct, reporter gene downstream of the LCR virtually eliminated the ectopic B cell expression of the upstream reporter observed in earlier studies. Downstream reporter gene activity was unaffected by the presence of a second gene upstream of the LCR. Our findings indicate that a gene arrangement in which the TCRα LCR is flanked by two distinct transcription units helps to restrict its activity, selectively, on its 5′-flanking gene, the natural TCRα gene position with respect to the LCR. Consistent with these findings, a TCRα/Dad1 locus bacterial artificial chromosome dual-reporter construct did not display the ectopic upstream (TCRα) reporter expression in B cells previously reported for single TCRα transgenes.
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spelling pubmed-29899202010-12-01 Ectopic T Cell Receptor-α Locus Control Region Activity in B Cells Is Suppressed by Direct Linkage to Two Flanking Genes at Once Knirr, Stefan Gomos-Klein, Janette Andino, Blanca E. Harrow, Faith Erhard, Karl F. Kovalovsky, Damian Sant'Angelo, Derek B. Ortiz, Benjamin D. PLoS One Research Article The molecular mechanisms regulating the activity of the TCRα gene are required for the production of the circulating T cell repertoire. Elements of the mouse TCRα locus control region (LCR) play a role in these processes. We previously reported that TCRα LCR DNA supports a gene expression pattern that mimics proper thymus-stage, TCRα gene-like developmental regulation. It also produces transcription of linked reporter genes in peripheral T cells. However, TCRα LCR-driven transgenes display ectopic transcription in B cells in multiple reporter gene systems. The reasons for this important deviation from the normal TCRα gene regulation pattern are unclear. In its natural locus, two genes flank the TCRα LCR, TCRα (upstream) and Dad1 (downstream). We investigated the significance of this gene arrangement to TCRα LCR activity by examining transgenic mice bearing a construct where the LCR was flanked by two separate reporter genes. Surprisingly, the presence of a second, distinct, reporter gene downstream of the LCR virtually eliminated the ectopic B cell expression of the upstream reporter observed in earlier studies. Downstream reporter gene activity was unaffected by the presence of a second gene upstream of the LCR. Our findings indicate that a gene arrangement in which the TCRα LCR is flanked by two distinct transcription units helps to restrict its activity, selectively, on its 5′-flanking gene, the natural TCRα gene position with respect to the LCR. Consistent with these findings, a TCRα/Dad1 locus bacterial artificial chromosome dual-reporter construct did not display the ectopic upstream (TCRα) reporter expression in B cells previously reported for single TCRα transgenes. Public Library of Science 2010-11-22 /pmc/articles/PMC2989920/ /pubmed/21124935 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015527 Text en Knirr et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Knirr, Stefan
Gomos-Klein, Janette
Andino, Blanca E.
Harrow, Faith
Erhard, Karl F.
Kovalovsky, Damian
Sant'Angelo, Derek B.
Ortiz, Benjamin D.
Ectopic T Cell Receptor-α Locus Control Region Activity in B Cells Is Suppressed by Direct Linkage to Two Flanking Genes at Once
title Ectopic T Cell Receptor-α Locus Control Region Activity in B Cells Is Suppressed by Direct Linkage to Two Flanking Genes at Once
title_full Ectopic T Cell Receptor-α Locus Control Region Activity in B Cells Is Suppressed by Direct Linkage to Two Flanking Genes at Once
title_fullStr Ectopic T Cell Receptor-α Locus Control Region Activity in B Cells Is Suppressed by Direct Linkage to Two Flanking Genes at Once
title_full_unstemmed Ectopic T Cell Receptor-α Locus Control Region Activity in B Cells Is Suppressed by Direct Linkage to Two Flanking Genes at Once
title_short Ectopic T Cell Receptor-α Locus Control Region Activity in B Cells Is Suppressed by Direct Linkage to Two Flanking Genes at Once
title_sort ectopic t cell receptor-α locus control region activity in b cells is suppressed by direct linkage to two flanking genes at once
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2989920/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21124935
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015527
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