The N-terminus of full-length RAG1, though dispensable for RAG1/2 cleavage activity, is required for efficient V(D)J recombination. This region supports RING E3 ubiquitin ligase activity in vitro, but whether full-length RAG1 functions as a single subunit or a multi-subunit E3 ligase in vivo is unclear. We show the multi-subunit cullin RING E3 ligase complex VprBP/DDB1/Cul4A/Roc1 associates with full-length RAG1 through VprBP. This complex is assembled into RAG protein-DNA complexes, and supports in-vitro ubiquitylation activity that is insensitive to RAG1 RING domain mutations. Conditional B lineagespecific VprBP disruption arrests B-cell development at the pro-B-to-pre-B cell transition, but this block is bypassed by expressing rearranged immunoglobulin transgenes. Mice with a conditional VprBP disruption show modest reduction of D-J H rearrangement, whereas V H -DJ H and V j -J j rearrangements are severely impaired. D-J H coding joints from VprBP-insufficent mice show longer junctional nucleotide insertions and a higher mutation frequency in D and J segments than normal. These data suggest full-length RAG1 recruits a cullin RING E3 ligase complex to ubiquitylate an unknown protein(s) to limit error-prone repair during V(D)J recombination. The EMBO Journal (2012) 31, 945-958.
Cigarette smoking adversely affects the immune system, and is a risk factor for developing osteoporosis. How smoking contributes to osteoporosis is unclear, but since lymphocytes help maintain bone homeostasis and lymphocyte depletion results in bone loss, one potential mechanism for how smoke exposure promotes osteoporosis is by reducing bone marrow lymphocytes. Since the risk for developing osteoporosis is reportedly greater in smokers with polymorphisms in LRP5, a gene involved in canonical Wnt signaling that regulates bone metabolism, smoking-induced effects on lymphocytes may be influenced by Lrp5 functionality. To test these possibilities, we examined how the duration and cessation of cigarette smoke exposure affects lymphocyte distribution and function in normal mice and mice predisposed to low or high bone mass due to disruption or mutation of Lrp5. We find that, independent of genotype, mice exposed to cigarette smoke for 3-12 weeks showed a significant reduction in bone marrow B220(+)CD43(-) B cells and splenic transitional T1 B cells, and exhibited a splenic CD4(+):CD8(+) T-cell ratio that was skewed toward CD8(+) T cells. Smoke exposure had little or no effect on other lymphocyte subsets or on lymphocyte function ex vivo. Interestingly, these differences were no longer apparent after 6 weeks without smoke exposure, except in mice with high bone mass where bone marrow B220(+)CD43(-) B cells failed to fully recover. These data provide the first evidence that smoke exposure reduces bone marrow B cells, providing a plausible mechanism for how smoking contributes to osteoporosis.
The characterization of the transcriptional similarities and differences existing between plant cells and cell types is important to better understand the biology of each cell composing the plant, to reveal new molecular mechanisms controlling gene activity, and to ultimately implement meaningful strategies to enhance plant cell biology. To gain a deeper understanding of the regulation of plant gene activity, the individual transcriptome of each plant cell needs to be established. Until recently, single cell approaches were mostly limited to bulk transcriptomic studies on selected cell types. Accessing specific cell types required the development of labor‐intensive strategies. Recently, single cell sequencing strategies were successfully applied on isolated Arabidopsis thaliana root protoplasts. However, this strategy relies on the successful isolation of viable protoplasts upon the optimization of the enzymatic cocktails required to digest the cell wall and on the compatibility of fragile plant protoplasts with the use of microfluidic systems to generate single cell transcriptomic libraries. To overcome these difficulties, we present a simple and fast alternative strategy: the isolation and use of plant nuclei to access meaningful transcriptomic information from plant cells. This protocol was specifically developed to enable the use of the plant nuclei with 10× Genomics’ Chromium technology partitions technology. Briefly, the plant nuclei are released from the root by chopping into a nuclei isolation buffer before purification by filtration then nuclei sorting. Upon sorting, the nuclei are resuspended in a low divalent ion buffer compatible with the Chromium technology in order to create single nuclei ribonucleic acid‐sequencing libraries (sNucRNA‐seq). © 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC. Basic Protocol 1: Arabidopsis seed sterilization and planting Basic Protocol 2: Nuclei isolation from Arabidopsis roots Basic Protocol 3: Fluorescent‐activated nuclei sorting (FANS) purification Support Protocol: Estimation of nuclei density using Countess II automated cell counter Alternate Protocol 1: Proper growth conditions for Medicago truncatula and Sorghum bicolor Alternate Protocol 2: Estimation of nuclei density using sNucRNA‐seq technology
RAG-1 and RAG-2 initiate V(D)J recombination by cleaving DNA at recombination signal sequences through sequential nicking and transesterification reactions to yield blunt signal ends and coding ends terminating in a DNA hairpin structure. Ubiquitous DNA repair factors then mediate the rejoining of broken DNA. V(D)J recombination adheres to the 12/23 rule, which limits rearrangement to signal sequences bearing different lengths of DNA (12 or 23 base pairs) between the conserved heptamer and nonamer sequences to which the RAG proteins bind. Both RAG proteins have been subjected to extensive mutagenesis, revealing residues required for one or both cleavage steps or involved in the DNA end-joining process. Gain-of-function RAG mutants remain unidentified. Here, we report a novel RAG-1 mutation, E649A, that supports elevated cleavage activity in vitro by preferentially enhancing hairpin formation. DNA binding activity and the catalysis of other DNA strand transfer reactions, such as transposition, are not substantially affected by the RAG-1 mutation. However, 12/23-regulated synapsis does not strongly stimulate the cleavage activity of a RAG complex containing E649A RAG-1, unlike its wild-type counterpart. Interestingly, wild-type and E649A RAG-1 support similar levels of cleavage and recombination of plasmid substrates containing a 12/23 pair of signal sequences in cell culture; however, E649A RAG-1 supports about threefold more cleavage and recombination than wild-type RAG-1 on 12/12 plasmid substrates. These data suggest that the E649A RAG-1 mutation may interfere with the RAG proteins' ability to sense 12/23-regulated synapsis. V(D)J recombination is the process by which noncontiguous antigen receptor gene coding segments, called variable (V), diversity (D), and joining (J), are assembled during lymphocyte development to produce the variable region exon of a mature antigen receptor gene (3). V(D)J recombination occurs in two distinct phases. In the first phase, two lymphoid cell-specific proteins called RAG-1 and RAG-2 assemble a multiprotein synaptic complex with two different gene segments through interactions with a conserved recombination signal sequence (RSS) that adjoins each gene segment. Each RSS contains a conserved heptamer and nonamer sequence, separated by either 12 or 23 base pairs of intervening DNA of more varied composition (12-RSS and 23-RSS, respectively). Generally, synaptic complexes are assembled with two RSSs whose spacer lengths are different (the 12/23 rule). Subsequently, the RAG proteins catalyze a DNA double-strand break at each RSS (for reviews, see references 10 and 13), yielding a postcleavage complex containing four DNA ends: two blunt, 5Ј phosphorylated recombination signal ends and two coding ends terminating in DNA hairpin structures (41,42,46). The RAG proteins generate these recombination intermediates by nicking the DNA at the junction between the RSS and the coding sequence and then transferring the resulting 3Ј-OH to the opposing DNA strand by direct transesterification (32,...
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