TY - JOUR T1 - Locus Suicide Recombination actively occurs on the functionally rearranged IgH allele in B-cells from inflamed human lymphoid tissues JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/430215 SP - 430215 AU - Iman Dalloul AU - François Boyer AU - Zeinab Dalloul AU - Amandine Pignarre AU - Gersende Lacombe AU - Thierry Fest AU - Fabrice Chatonnet AU - Céline Delaloy AU - Anne Durandy AU - Robin Jeannet AU - Emilie Lereclus AU - Hend Boutouil AU - Jean-Claude Aldigier AU - Sophie Peron AU - Jeanne Cook-Moreau AU - Michel Cogné Y1 - 2018/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/09/28/430215.abstract N2 - B-cell activation yields abundant cell death in parallel to clonal amplification and remodeling of immunoglobulin (Ig) genes by activation-induced deaminase (AID). AID promotes affinity maturation of Ig variable regions and class switch recombination (CSR) in mature B lymphocytes. In the IgH locus, these processes are under control by the 3’ regulatory region (3’RR) super-enhancer, a region demonstrated in the mouse to be both transcribed and itself targeted by AID-mediated recombination. Alternatively to CSR, IgH deletions joining Sμ to “like-switch” DNA repeats that flank the 3’ super-enhancer can thus accomplish so-called “locus suicide recombination” (LSR) in mouse B-cells. We now show that AID-mediated LSR also actively occurs in humans, and provides an activation-induced cell death pathway in multiple conditions of B-cell activation. LSR deletions either focus on the functional IgH allele or are bi-allelic, since they can only be detected when they are ongoing and their signature vanishes from fully differentiated plasma cells or from “resting” blood memory B-cells, but readily reappears when such memory B-cells are re-stimulated in vitro. Highly diversified breakpoints are distributed either within the upstream (3’RR1) or downstream (3’RR2) copies of the IgH 3’ super-enhancer and all conditions activating CSR in vitro also seem to trigger LSR.Author Summary Class switch recombination, initiated by the activation-induced deaminase enzyme rearranges immunoglobulin (Ig) genes in order to replace expression of IgM by IgG, IgA or IgE. A variant form of this event, locus suicide recombination (LSR), was previously reported in mouse B-lymphocytes and simply deletes all functional Ig constant genes, thus terminating B-cell function. This study first demonstrates that the structure of the human Ig heavy chain locus provides an ideal target for LSR, and is thus actively (but transiently) affected by this deletional process at the activated B-cell stage. LSR then yields recombined genes that do not support B-cell survival and which thus become undetectable among long-lived memory B-cells or plasma cells. ER -