V(D)J recombination is initiated by double-strand cleavage at recombination signal sequences (RSSs). DNA cleavage is mediated by the RAG1 and RAG2 proteins. Recent experiments describing RAG protein-RSS complexes, while defining the interaction of RAG1 with the nonamer, have not assigned contacts immediately adjacent to the site of DNA cleavage to either RAG polypeptide. Here we use UV cross-linking to define sequence-and site-specific interactions between RAG1 protein and both the heptamer element of the RSS and the coding flank DNA. Hence, RAG1-DNA contacts span the site of cleavage. We also detect cross-linking of RAG2 protein to some of the same nucleotides that cross-link to RAG1, indicating that, in the binding complex, both RAG proteins are in close proximity to the site of cleavage. These results suggest how the heptamer element, the recognition surface essential for DNA cleavage, is recognized by the RAG proteins and have implications for the stoichiometry and active site organization of the RAG1-RAG2-RSS complex.The variable portions of antigen receptor genes are assembled from component gene segments during lymphocyte development by a process known as V(D)J recombination. The gene segments that undergo rearrangement are flanked by recombination signal sequences (RSSs), consisting of conserved heptamer (CACAGTG) and nonamer (ACAAAAA CC) elements separated by a spacer of either 12 or 23 bp. Recombination brings two protein-coding regions together in an imprecise junction and joins the two RSSs with the heptamer elements fused head-to-head. Recombination occurs predominantly between gene segments flanked by RSSs with spacers of unequal lengths. This "12/23 rule" helps to restrict the reaction to developmentally useful combinations (19).The products of the recombination activating genes, RAG1 and RAG2, are necessary for the initiation of V(D)J recombination (28, 41) and together catalyze the creation of a doublestrand break at the border of an RSS (23, 50). They first introduce a nick 5Ј to the first C nucleotide of the heptamer element. This exposes a 3Ј hydroxyl which then attacks the opposite strand of the DNA, creating a 5Ј-phosphorylated blunt end on the signal side and a closed hairpin on the side that will form protein-coding sequence (see Fig. 1A).The sequence requirements for hairpin formation are more stringent than those for initial nicking. In cells and in crude extracts, hairpin formation requires the formation of a synaptic complex involving the two RSSs, while nicking can occur at an isolated signal (10,11,13,44,45). The RAG proteins intrinsically prefer to cleave a 12/23 pair of signals (52); however, the ubiquitous DNA-bending proteins HMG-1 and HMG-2 strengthen this preference by boosting cleavage at the RSS with a 23-bp spacer and by aiding in the formation of a synaptic complex (39, 49). In addition, in a single-signal context, some mutations of the heptamer element substantially inhibit hairpin formation without preventing initial nicking (7, 31).Mutants of RAG1 have been identified a...