Immunoglobulin Genes Flashcards

1
Q

How diversity in antibodies is created at the gene level

A

Gene rearrangement: many different fragments exist on germline cells, but B cells have only one fragment from each component

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2
Q

Fragments involved in antibody light chains

A

V (variable), J (joining), C (constant)

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3
Q

Fragments involved in antibody heavy chains

A

V (variable), J (joining), D (diversity), C (constant)

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4
Q

Chromosomal location of antibody genes

A

2 parts of Ig that come together (light and heavy chains) are coded for on different chromosomes
2 types of light chains (lambda and kappa) are coded for on different chromosomes
3 chromosomes total involved

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5
Q

Gene rearrangement process for light chain vs heavy chain

A

Light chain: one recombination event (V-J joining)

Heavy chain: two recombination events (D-J joining, V-DJ joining)

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6
Q

Site of DNA cleavage

A

Recombination signal sequence

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7
Q

Order of heavy chain gene recombination

A

Rearrangement of one allele
If unsuccessful, rearrangement of second allele
If unsuccessful, cell death
If rearrangement is successful, stimulation of light chain rearrangment

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8
Q

Allelic exclusion

A

Only one Ig allele is expressed in the antibody (true for both heavy and light chains)

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9
Q

Order of light chain gene recombination

A

Rearrangment of one kappa allele
If unsuccessful, rearrangement of second kappa allele
If unsuccessful, rearrangement of lambda allele
If unsuccessful, rearrangement of second lambda allele
If unsuccessful, cell death

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10
Q

Isotypic exclusion

A

In one B cell, there will be either a lambda or a kappa chain, not both

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11
Q

Isotype switching occurs where?

A

Mature B cell, exposed to antigen

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12
Q

Is isotype switching a reversible process?

A

No- the looped out DNA is gone

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13
Q

Isotype switching purpose and mechanism

A

Purpose: letting B cell produce other types of Igs other than IgM
DNA strand contains all isotypes of Ig- IgM is first in order
DNA loops out isotypes proceeding desired isotype (ex- loops out IgM and IgD so that IgG can be produced)

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14
Q

Membrane-bound vs secreted Ig: how produced

A

RNA splicing of Ig transcript removes exon that codes for membrane-bound portion of Ig to create secreted Ig

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15
Q

What enables co-expression of IgM and IgD?

A

Alternative RNA processing: polyadenylation and splicing

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16
Q

Where Ig is synthesized in cell

A

Rough endoplasmic reticulum

17
Q

3 types of DNA regulatory sequences that regulate transcription of Ig genes

A

Promoters: initiate transcription
Enhancers: help transcription to occur
Silencers: block transcription

18
Q

5 ways that diversity of Ig genes is generated

A
  1. Gene rearrangement (VDJ pairs)
  2. Combinatorial association of heavy and light chains
  3. Somatic hypermutation
  4. Alternative splicing
  5. Base insertion (addition of a few bases at splice site)
19
Q

Somatic hypermutation is unique to what kind of cells?

A

B cells

20
Q

Somatic hypermutation: what it does and how it works

A

Increases diversity of variable regions of Igs

Mutation in variable regions following antigen exposure leading to increased antigen binding strength