Lymphoid differentiation pathways can be traced by TCR delta rearrangements
Language English Country Great Britain, England Media print
Document type Comparative Study, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
PubMed
16081821
DOI
10.4049/jimmunol.175.4.2495
PII: 175/4/2495
Knihovny.cz E-resources
- MeSH
- Cell Differentiation genetics immunology MeSH
- Cell Line MeSH
- Cell Lineage genetics immunology MeSH
- HT29 Cells MeSH
- Killer Cells, Natural cytology enzymology immunology metabolism MeSH
- Genetic Markers MeSH
- Gene Rearrangement, delta-Chain T-Cell Antigen Receptor physiology MeSH
- Gene Rearrangement, gamma-Chain T-Cell Antigen Receptor MeSH
- HeLa Cells MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Molecular Sequence Data MeSH
- Cell Line, Tumor MeSH
- Base Pairing MeSH
- B-Lymphocyte Subsets cytology enzymology immunology metabolism MeSH
- Lymphocyte Subsets cytology enzymology immunology metabolism MeSH
- Polymerase Chain Reaction MeSH
- Base Sequence MeSH
- Sequence Analysis, DNA MeSH
- VDJ Recombinases metabolism MeSH
- Check Tag
- Humans MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't MeSH
- Comparative Study MeSH
- Names of Substances
- Genetic Markers MeSH
- VDJ Recombinases MeSH
TCR gene rearrangement generates diversity of T lymphocytes by V(D)J recombination. Ig genes are rearranged in B cells using the same enzyme machinery. TCRD (TCR delta) genes are frequently incompletely rearranged in B precursor leukemias and recently were found in a significant portion of physiological B lymphocytes. Incomplete TCRD rearrangements (V-D) thus serve as natural indicators of previous V(D)J recombinase activity. Functional V(D)J recombinase has recently been found in murine NK precursors. We tested whether physiological NK cells and other leukocyte subpopulations contained TCR rearrangements in humans. This would provide evidence that V(D)J recombinase was active in the ancestry cells and suggest common pathways among the positive cell types. TCRD were rearranged in 3.2-36% of NK cells but not in nonlymphoid leukocytes. The previously known phenomenon of TCRD transcription in NK cells is a possible mechanism that maintains the chromatin open at the TCRD locus. In comparison, TCRG rearrangements were frequent in T cells, low to negative in B and NK cells, and negative in nonlymphoid cells, suggesting a tighter control of TCRG. Levels of TCRD rearrangements were similar among the B lymphocyte subsets (B1-B2, naive-memory). In conclusion, human NK cells pass through a differentiation step with active V(D)J recombinase similar to T and B lymphocytes and unlike nonlymphoid leukocytes. This contradicts recent challenges to the concept of separate lymphoid and myeloid differentiation.
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