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Rearrangement and expression of T cell antigen receptor and gamma genes during thymic development.

164

Citations

72

References

1986

Year

TLDR

T cell antigen receptor gene rearrangement is a regulated process that begins with gamma genes, followed by beta and alpha, primarily occurring in the thymus but with some gamma rearrangements also seen in fetal liver progenitors. Functional alpha and beta gene RNA were first detected at day 17 of gestation alongside T3 delta chain RNA, adult thymocyte subpopulations showed similar levels of beta and gamma rearrangements, and quantitative analysis revealed that beta rearrangements occur on both homologs and preferentially target the Jβ2 cluster.

Abstract

Rearrangement and expression of the T cell antigen receptor and the gamma genes during T cell ontogeny is a regulated process; the gamma genes are rearranged and expressed first, followed by the beta and then the alpha genes. Expression of both functional alpha and beta gene RNA first occurs at day 17 of gestation, along with the expression of T3 delta chain RNA. T cell antigen receptor gene rearrangements occur primarily or exclusively in the thymus, although some gamma gene rearrangements occur outside the thymus in fetal liver cells that may be committed T cell progenitors. There is no gross difference in the extent of beta and gamma gene rearrangements in the adult thymocyte subpopulations that were analyzed, despite the fact that some of these populations cannot respond to antigen and never emigrate from the thymus. Quantitative analysis of rearrangements in total adult thymocyte DNA shows that beta gene rearrangements generally occur on both chromosomal homologs, and that rearrangements occur preferentially to the J beta 2 gene segment cluster.

References

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