research article
Off-Target V(D)J Recombination Drives Lymphomagenesis and Is Escalated by Loss of the Rag2 C Terminus.
Abstract
Genome-wide analysis of thymic lymphomas from Tp53(-/-) mice with wild-type or C-terminally truncated Rag2 revealed numerous off-target, RAG-mediated DNA rearrangements. A significantly higher fraction of these errors mutated known and suspected oncogenes/tumor suppressor genes than did sporadic rearrangements (p \u3c 0.0001). This tractable mouse model recapitulates recent findings in human pre-B ALL and allows comparison of wild-type and mutant RAG2. Recurrent, RAG-mediated deletions affected Notch1, Pten, Ikzf1, Jak1, Phlda1, Trat1, and Agpat9. Rag2 truncation substantially increased the frequency of off-target V(D)J recombination. The data suggest that interactions between Rag2 and a specific chromatin modification, H3K4me3, support V(D)J recombination fidelity. Oncogenic effects of off-target rearrangements created by this highly regulated recombinase may need to be considered in design of site-specific nucleases engineered for genome modification- article
- Cardeza Foundation for Hematological Research
- Thomas Jefferson University; Agpat9 gene; animal experiment; animal model; Article; carboxy terminal sequence; carcinogenesis; chromatin; controlled study; gene; gene deletion; gene locus; gene rearrangement; Ikzf1 gene; Jak1 gene; mouse; mutational analysis; nonhuman; Notch1 gene; Phlda1 gene; priority journal; Pten gene; structure activity relation; thymus lymphoma; Trat1 gene; VDJ recombination; wild type
- Hematology