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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Mutation pattern of immunoglobulin transgenes is compatible with a model of somatic hypermutation in which targeting of the mutator is linked to the direction of DNA replication.

We have previously demonstrated that B lymphocyte specific somatic mutations are introduced into the variable regions of immunoglobulin kappa transgenes in two independent transgenic mouse lines. The frequency, distribution and nature of these mutations strongly suggest that they arose as a result of the process of somatic hypermutation, which is responsible, in part, for affinity maturation during an immune response. Unexpectedly, in these multiple copy transgenic lines, many of the transgene copies showed no evidence of somatic mutation. This paradox was addressed by determining the sequence of each transgene copy in several B cell hybridomas derived from a mouse line carrying three copies of the kappa transgene. It was found that the somatic hypermutation process in different B cells from the same mouse preferentially targets one, but not the same, transgene copy. We present a model, based on the pattern of this targeting, which links somatic hypermutation to the orientation of the Ig gene relative to the direction of DNA replication.[1]

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