RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 The usage of six human IGHJ genes follows a particular nonrandom selection: The recombination signal sequence affects the usage frequency of six human IGHJ genes JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 792085 DO 10.1101/792085 A1 Bin Shi A1 Xiaoheng Dong A1 Qingqing Ma A1 Suhong Sun A1 Long Ma A1 Jiang Yu A1 Xiaomei Wang A1 Juan Pan A1 Xiaoyan He A1 Danhua Su A1 Xinsheng Yao YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/10/07/792085.abstract AB The formation of the B cell receptor (BCR) heavy chain variable region is derived from the germline V(D)J gene rearrangement according to the “12/23” rule and the “beyond 12/23” rule. The usage frequency of each V(D)J gene in the peripheral BCR repertoires is related to the initial recombination, self-tolerance selection, and the clonal proliferative response. However, their specific differences and possible mechanisms are still unknown. We analyzed in-frame and out-of-frame BCR-H repertoires from human samples with physiological and various pathological conditions by high-throughput sequencing. Our results showed that IGHJ gene frequency follows a similar pattern where IGHJ4 is used at high frequency (>40%), IGHJ6/IGHJ3/IGHJ5 is used at medium frequencies (10%∼20%), and IGH2/IGHJ1 is used at low frequency (<4%) under whether physiological or various pathological conditions. Furthermore, analysis of the recombination signal sequences suggested that the conserved nonamer and heptamer and certain 23 bp spacer length may affect the initial IGHD-IGHJ recombination, which results in different frequencies of IGHJ genes among the initial BCR-H repertoire. Based on this “background repertoire”, we recommend that re-evaluation and further investigation are needed when analyzing the significance and mechanism of IGHJ gene frequency in self-tolerance selection and the clonal proliferative response.