Publication: CCCTC-Binding Factor Locks Premature IgH Germline Transcription and
Restrains Class Switch Recombination
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Frontiers Media
Abstract
In response to antigenic stimulation B cells undergo class switch
recombination (CSR) at the immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) to replace
the primary IgM/IgD isotypes by IgG, IgE, or IgA. CSR is initiated by
activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) through the deamination of
cytosine residues at the switch (S) regions of IgH. B cell stimulation
promotes germline transcription (GLT) of specific S regions, a necessary
event prior to CSR because it facilitates AID access to S regions. Here,
we show that CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF)-deficient mice are severely
impaired in the generation of germinal center B cells and plasma cells
after immunization in vivo, most likely due to impaired cell survival.
Importantly, we find that CTCF-deficient B cells have an increased rate
of CSR under various stimulation conditions in vitro. This effect is not
secondary to altered cell proliferation or AID expression in
CTCF-deficient cells. Instead, we find that CTCF-deficient B cells
harbor an increased mutation frequency at switch regions, probably
reflecting an increased accessibility of AID to IgH in the absence of
CTCF. Moreover, CTCF deficiency triggers premature GLT of S regions in
naive B cells. Our results indicate that CTCF restricts CSR by enforcing
GLT silencing and limiting AID access to IgH.
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Front Immunol. 2017; 8:1076








