Extremely Long-Range Chromatin Loops Link Topological Domains to Facilitate a Diverse Antibody Repertoire

Lindsey E. Montefiori(National Institutes of Health), Robert Wuerffel(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Damian Roqueiro(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Bryan R. Lajoie(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Changying Guo(National Institutes of Health), T. I. Gerasimova(National Institutes of Health), Supriyo De(National Institutes of Health), William H. Wood(National Institutes of Health), Kevin G. Becker(National Institutes of Health), Job Dekker(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Jie Liang(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign), Ranjan Sen(National Institutes of Health), Amy Kenter(University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign)
Cell Reports
January 21, 2016
Cited by 87Open Access
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Abstract

Early B cell development is characterized by large-scale Igh locus contraction prior to V(D)J recombination to facilitate a highly diverse Ig repertoire. However, an understanding of the molecular architecture that mediates locus contraction remains unclear. We have combined high-resolution chromosome conformation capture (3C) techniques with 3D DNA FISH to identify three conserved topological subdomains. Each of these topological folds encompasses a major VH gene family that become juxtaposed in pro-B cells via megabase-scale chromatin looping. The transcription factor Pax5 organizes the subdomain that spans the VHJ558 gene family. In its absence, the J558 VH genes fail to associate with the proximal VH genes, thereby providing a plausible explanation for reduced VHJ558 gene rearrangements in Pax5-deficient pro-B cells. We propose that Igh locus contraction is the cumulative effect of several independently controlled chromatin subdomains that provide the structural infrastructure to coordinate optimal antigen receptor assembly.


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