Abstract
Because of the extreme diversity in immunoglobulin genes, tolerance mechanisms are necessary to ensure that B cells do not respond to self-antigens. One such tolerance mechanism is called receptor editing. If the B cell receptor (BCR) on an immature B cell recognizes self-antigen, it is down-regulated from the cell surface, and light chain gene rearrangement continues in an attempt to edit the autoreactive specificity. Analysis of a heterozygous mutant mouse in which the NF-κB-dependent IκBα gene was replaced with a lacZ (β-gal) reporter complementary DNA (cDNA; IκBα +/lacZ) suggests a potential role for NF-κB in receptor editing. Sorted β-gal+ pre-B cells showed increased levels of various markers of receptor editing. In IκBα+/lacZ reporter mice expressing either innocuous or self-specific knocked in BCRs, β-gal was preferentially expressed in pre-B cells from the mice with self-specific BCRs. Retroviral-mediated expression of a cDNA encoding an IκBα superrepressor in primary bone marrow cultures resulted in diminished germline κ and rearranged λ transcripts but similar levels of RAG expression as compared with controls. We found that IRF4 transcripts were up-regulated in β-gal+ pre-B cells. Because IRF4 is a target of NF-κB and is required for receptor editing, we suggest that NF-κB could be acting through IRF4 to regulate receptor editing.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 1803-1816 |
Number of pages | 14 |
Journal | Journal of Experimental Medicine |
Volume | 206 |
Issue number | 8 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Aug 3 2009 |
Externally published | Yes |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Medicine(all)