Person: Alt, Frederick
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Publication ATM-deficient Thymic Lymphoma is Associated with Aberrant tcrd Rearrangement and Gene Amplification
(The Rockefeller University Press, 2010) Bassing, Craig H.; Brush, James W.; Patel, Harin; Goff, Peter H.; Gatti, Richard A.; Zha, Shan; Sanda, Takaomi; Murphy, Michael M.; Tepsuporn, Suprawee; Look, A.; Alt, FrederickAtaxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) deficiency predisposes humans and mice to T lineage lymphomas with recurrent chromosome 14 translocations involving the T cell receptor α/δ (Tcra/d) locus. Such translocations have been thought to result from aberrant repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) during Tcra locus V(D)J recombination, and to require the Tcra enhancer (Eα) for Tcra rearrangement or expression of the translocated oncogene. We now show that, in addition to the known chromosome 14 translocation, ATM-deficient mouse thymic lymphomas routinely contain a centromeric fragment of chromosome 14 that spans up to the 5′ boundary of the Tcra/d locus, at which position a 500-kb or larger region centromeric to Tcra/d is routinely amplified. In addition, they routinely contain a large deletion of the telomeric end of one copy of chromosome 12. In contrast to prior expectations, the recurrent translocations and amplifications involve V(D)J recombination–initiated breaks in the Tcrd locus, as opposed to the Tcra locus, and arise independently of the Eα. Overall, our studies reveal previously unexpected mechanisms that contribute to the oncogenic transformation of ATM-deficient T lineage cells.
Publication Localized DNA Demethylation at Recombination Intermediates during Immunoglobulin Heavy Chain Gene Assembly
(Public Library of Science, 2013) Selimyan, Roza; Gerstein, Rachel M.; Ivanova, Irina; Precht, Patricia; Subrahmanyam, Ramesh; Perlot, Thomas; Alt, Frederick; Sen, RanjanMultiple epigenetic marks have been proposed to contribute to the regulation of antigen receptor gene assembly via V(D)J recombination. Here we provide a comprehensive view of DNA methylation at the immunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) gene locus prior to and during V(D)J recombination. DNA methylation did not correlate with the histone modification state on unrearranged alleles, indicating that these epigenetic marks were regulated independently. Instead, pockets of tissue-specific demethylation were restricted to DNase I hypersensitive sites within this locus. Though unrearranged diversity (DH) and joining (JH) gene segments were methylated, DJH junctions created after the first recombination step were largely demethylated in pro-, pre-, and mature B cells. Junctional demethylation was highly localized, B-lineage-specific, and required an intact tissue-specific enhancer, Eμ. We propose that demethylation occurs after the first recombination step and may mark the junction for secondary recombination.
Publication Immature B cells preferentially switch to IgE with increased direct Sμ to Sε recombination
(The Rockefeller University Press, 2011) Wesemann, Duane; Magee, Jennifer M.; Boboila, Cristian; Calado, Dinis Pedro; Gallagher, Michael P.; Portuguese, Andrew J.; Manis, John; Zhou, Xiaolong; Recher, Mike; Rajewsky, Klaus; Notarangelo, Luigi; Alt, FrederickImmunoglobulin heavy chain (IgH) class-switch recombination (CSR) replaces initially expressed Cμ (IgM) constant regions (C(H)) exons with downstream C(H) exons. Stimulation of B cells with anti-CD40 plus interleukin-4 induces CSR from Cμ to Cγ1 (IgG1) and Cε (IgE), the latter of which contributes to the pathogenesis of atopic diseases. Although Cε CSR can occur directly from Cμ, most mature peripheral B cells undergo CSR to Cε indirectly, namely from Cμ to Cγ1, and subsequently to Cε. Physiological mechanisms that influence CSR to Cγ1 versus Cε are incompletely understood. In this study, we report a role for B cell developmental maturity in IgE CSR. Based in part on a novel flow cytometric IgE CSR assay, we show that immature B cells preferentially switch to IgE versus IgG1 through a mechanism involving increased direct CSR from Cμ to Cε. Our findings suggest that IgE dysregulation in certain immunodeficiencies may be related to impaired B cell maturation.
Publication Analysis of Mice Lacking DNaseI Hypersensitive Sites at the 5′ End of the IgH Locus
(Public Library of Science, 2010) Perlot, Thomas; Pawlitzky, Inka; Manis, John; Zarrin, Ali A.; Brodeur, Peter H.; Alt, FrederickThe 5′ end of the IgH locus contains a cluster of DNaseI hypersensitive sites, one of which (HS1) was shown to be pro-B cell specific and to contain binding sites for the transcription factors PU.1, E2A, and Pax5. These data as well as the location of the hypersensitive sites at the 5′ border of the IgH locus suggested a possible regulatory function for these elements with respect to the IgH locus. To test this notion, we generated mice carrying targeted deletions of either the pro-B cell specific site HS1 or the whole cluster of DNaseI hypersensitive sites. Lymphocytes carrying these deletions appear to undergo normal development, and mutant B cells do not exhibit any obvious defects in V(D)J recombination, allelic exclusion, or class switch recombination. We conclude that deletion of these DNaseI hypersensitive sites does not have an obvious impact on the IgH locus or B cell development.
Publication Epigenetic Tethering of AID to the Donor Switch Region during Immunoglobulin Class Switch Recombination
(The Rockefeller University Press, 2011) Jeevan-Raj, Beena Patricia; Robert, Isabelle; Heyer, Vincent; Page, Adeline; Wang, Jing H.; Cammas, Florence; Alt, Frederick; Losson, Régine; Reina-San-Martin, BernardoImmunoglobulin class switch recombination (CSR) is initiated by double-stranded DNA breaks (DSBs) in switch regions triggered by activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID). Although CSR correlates with epigenetic modifications at the IgH locus, the relationship between these modifications and AID remains unknown. In this study, we show that during CSR, AID forms a complex with KAP1 (KRAB domain–associated protein 1) and HP1 (heterochromatin protein 1) that is tethered to the donor switch region (Sμ) bearing H3K9me3 (trimethylated histone H3 at lysine 9) in vivo. Furthermore, in vivo disruption of this complex results in impaired AID recruitment to Sμ, inefficient DSB formation, and a concomitant defect in CSR but not in somatic hypermutation. We propose that KAP1 and HP1 tether AID to H3K9me3 residues at the donor switch region, thus providing a mechanism linking AID to epigenetic modifications during CSR.
Publication Microbial colonization influences early B-lineage development in the gut lamina propria
(2013) Wesemann, Duane; Portuguese, Andrew J.; Meyers, Robin M.; Gallagher, Michael P.; Cluff-Jones, Kendra; Magee, Jennifer M.; Panchakshari, Rohit A.; Rodig, Scott J.; Kepler, Thomas B.; Alt, FrederickThe RAG1/RAG2 endonuclease ("RAG") initiates the V(D)J recombination reaction that assembles Ig heavy (IgH) and light (IgL) chain variable region exons from germline gene segments to generate primary antibody repertoires1. IgH V(D)J assembly occurs in progenitor (pro-) B cells followed by that of IgL in precursor (pre-) B cells. Expression of IgH μ and IgL (Igκ or Igλ) chains generates IgM, which is expressed on immature B cells as the B cell antigen-binding receptor ("BCR"). Rag expression can continue in immature B cells2, allowing continued Igκ V(D)J recombination that replaces the initial VκJκ exon with one that generates a new specificity3–5. This “receptor editing” process, which also can lead to Igλ V(D)J recombination and expression3,6,7, provides a mechanism whereby antigen-encounter at the Rag-expressing immature B cell stage helps shape pre-immune BCR repertoires. As the major site of post-natal B cell development, the bone marrow is the principal location of primary Ig repertoire diversification in mice. Here, we report that early B cell development also occurs within the mouse intestinal lamina propria (LP), where the associated V(D)J recombination/receptor editing processes modulate primary LP Ig repertoires. At weanling age in normally housed mice, the LP contains a population of Rag-expressing B lineage cells that harbor intermediates indicative of ongoing V(D)J recombination and which contain cells with pro-B, pre-B, and editing phenotypes. Consistent with LP-specific receptor editing, Rag-expressing LP B-lineage cells have similar VH repertoires, but significantly different Vκ repertoires, compared to those of Rag2-expressing BM counterparts. Moreover, colonization of germ-free mice leads to an increased ratio of Igλ-expressing versus Igκ-expressing B cells specifically in the LP. We conclude that B cell development occurs in the intestinal mucosa, where it is regulated by extra-cellular signals from commensal microbes that influence gut Ig repertoires.
Publication Genome-wide detection of DNA double-stranded breaks induced by engineered nucleases
(2014) Frock, Richard Lee; Hu, Jiazhi; Meyers, Robin M.; Ho, Yu-Jui; Kii, Erina; Alt, FrederickAlthough great progress has been made in the characterization of off-target effects of engineered nucleases, sensitive and unbiased genome-wide methods for the detection of off-target cleavage events and potential collateral damage are still lacking. Here we describe a linear amplification–mediated modification of a previously published high-throughput, genome-wide translocation sequencing (HTGTS) method that robustly detects DNA double-stranded breaks (DSBs) generated by engineered nucleases across the human genome based on their translocation to other endogenous or ectopic DSBs. HTGTS with different Cas9:sgRNA or TALEN-nucleases revealed off-target hotspots for given nucleases that ranged from a few or none to dozens or more, and extended the number of known off-targets for certain previously characterized nucleases by more than 10-fold. We also identified translocations between bona fide nuclease targets on homologous chromosomes, an undesired collateral effect that has not been described. Finally, HTGTS confirmed that the Cas9D10A paired nickase approach suppresses off-target cleavage genome-wide.
Publication Localized Epigenetic Changes Induced by DH Recombination Restricts Recombinase to DJH Junctions
(2013) Subrahmanyam, Ramesh; Du, Hansen; Ivanova, Irina; Chakraborty, Tirtha; Ji, Yanhong; Zhang, Yu; Alt, Frederick; Schatz, David G.; Sen, RanjanImmunoglobulin heavy chain (Igh) genes are assembled by sequential rearrangements of diversity (DH) and variable (VH) gene segments. Three critical constraints govern VH recombination. These include timing (VH recombination follows DH recombination), precision (VHs recombine only to DJH junctions) and allele specificity (VH recombination is restricted to DJH recombined alleles). We provide a model for these universal features of VH recombination. Analyses of DJH recombined alleles revealed that DJH junctions were selectively epigenetically marked, became nuclease sensitive and bound RAG proteins, thereby permitting DH-associated recombination signal sequences to initiate the second step of Igh gene assembly. We propose that VH recombination is precise because these changes did not extend to germline DH gene segments located 5′ of the DJH junction.
Publication Essential Developmental, Genomic Stability, and Tumour Suppressor Functions of the Mouse Orthologue of hSSB1/NABP2
(Public Library of Science, 2013) Shi, Wei; Bain, Amanda L.; Schwer, Bjoern; Al-Ejeh, Fares; Smith, Corey; Wong, Lee; Chai, Hua; Miranda, Mariska S.; Ho, Uda; Kawaguchi, Makoto; Miura, Yutaka; Finnie, John W.; Wall, Meaghan; Heierhorst, Jörg; Wicking, Carol; Spring, Kevin J.; Alt, Frederick; Khanna, Kum KumSingle-stranded DNA binding proteins (SSBs) regulate multiple DNA transactions, including replication, transcription, and repair. We recently identified SSB1 as a novel protein critical for the initiation of ATM signaling and DNA double-strand break repair by homologous recombination. Here we report that germline Ssb1(^{−/−}) embryos die at birth from respiratory failure due to severe rib cage malformation and impaired alveolar development, coupled with additional skeletal defects. Unexpectedly, Ssb1(^{−/−}) fibroblasts did not exhibit defects in Atm signaling or γ-H2ax focus kinetics in response to ionizing radiation (IR), and B-cell specific deletion of Ssb1 did not affect class-switch recombination in vitro. However, conditional deletion of Ssb1 in adult mice led to increased cancer susceptibility with broad tumour spectrum, impaired male fertility with testicular degeneration, and increased radiosensitivity and IR–induced chromosome breaks in vivo. Collectively, these results demonstrate essential roles of Ssb1 in embryogenesis, spermatogenesis, and genome stability in vivo.
Publication Orientation-specific RAG activity in chromosomal loop domains contributes to Tcrd V(D)J recombination during T cell development
(The Rockefeller University Press, 2016) Zhao, Lijuan; Frock, Richard Lee; Du, Zhou; Hu, Jiazhi; Chen, Liang; Krangel, Michael S.; Alt, FrederickT cell antigen receptor δ (Tcrd) variable region exons are assembled by RAG-initiated V(D)J recombination events in developing γδ thymocytes. Here, we use linear amplification–mediated high-throughput genome-wide translocation sequencing (LAM-HTGTS) to map hundreds of thousands of RAG-initiated Tcrd D segment (Trdd1 and Trdd2) rearrangements in CD4−CD8− double-negative thymocyte progenitors differentiated in vitro from bone marrow–derived hematopoietic stem cells. We find that Trdd2 joins directly to Trdv, Trdd1, and Trdj segments, whereas Trdd1 joining is ordered with joining to Trdd2, a prerequisite for further rearrangement. We also find frequent, previously unappreciated, Trdd1 and Trdd2 rearrangements that inactivate Tcrd, including sequential rearrangements from V(D)J recombination signal sequence fusions. Moreover, we find dozens of RAG off-target sequences that are generated via RAG tracking both upstream and downstream from the Trdd2 recombination center across the Tcrd loop domain that is bounded by the upstream INT1-2 and downstream TEA elements. Disruption of the upstream INT1-2 boundary of this loop domain allows spreading of RAG on- and off-target activity to the proximal Trdv domain and, correspondingly, shifts the Tcrd V(D)J recombination landscape by leading to predominant V(D)J joining to a proximal Trdv3 pseudogene that lies just upstream of the normal boundary.
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