
Zou YR, Takeda S, Rajewsky K:
Gene targeting in the Ig kappa locus: efficient generation of lambda
chain-expressing B cells, independent of gene rearrangements in Ig
kappa.
EMBO Journal 1993 Mar;12(3):811-20
ABSTRACT
The production of lambda chain-expressing B cells was studied in
mice in which either the gene encoding the constant region of the
kappa chain (C kappa) or the intron enhancer in the Ig kappa locus
was inactivated by insertion of a neomycin resistance gene. The two
mutants have similar phenotypes: in heterozygous mutant mice the
fraction of lambda chain-bearing B cells is twice that in the
wildtype. Homozygous mutants produce approximately 7 times more
lambda-expressing B cells (and about 2.3 times fewer total B cells)
in the bone marrow than their normal counterparts, suggesting that B
cell progenitors can differentiate into either kappa- or
lambda-producing cells and do the latter in the mutants. Whereas
gene rearrangements in the Ig kappa locus are blocked in the case of
enhancer inactivation, they still occur in that of the C kappa
mutant, although in this mutant RS rearrangement is lower than in
the wildtype. This indicates that gene rearrangements in the Ig
lambda locus can occur in the absence of a putative positive signal
resulting from gene rearrangements in Ig kappa, including RS
recombination. Complementing these results, we also present data
indicating that in normal B cell development kappa chain
rearrangement can be preceded by lambda chain rearrangement and that
the frequency of kappa/lambda double producers is small and
insufficient to explain the massive production of lambda
chain-expressing B cells in the mutants.