recombination activating gene
|
recombination activating gene 1
|
|
| Identifiers | |
| Symbol | RAG1 |
| Entrez | 5896 |
| HUGO | 9831 |
| OMIM | 179615 |
| RefSeq | NM_000448 |
| UniProt | P15918 |
| Other data | |
| Locus | Chr. 11 p13 |
|
recombination activating gene 2
|
|
| Identifiers | |
| Symbol | RAG2 |
| Entrez | 5897 |
| HUGO | 9832 |
| OMIM | 179616 |
| RefSeq | NM_000536 |
| UniProt | P55895 |
| Other data | |
| Locus | Chr. 11 p13 |
The recombination activating genes encode enzymes that play an important role in the
rearrangement and recombination of the genes of
Function of RAG proteins
RAG enzymes work as a multi-subunit complex to induce cleavage of a single double stranded DNA (dsDNA) molecule between the antigen receptor coding segment and a flanking recombination signal sequence (RSS). They do this in two steps. They initially introduce a ‘nick’ in the 5' (upstream) end of the RSS heptamer (a conserved region of 7 nucleotides) that is adjacent to the coding sequence, leaving behind a specific biochemical structure on this region of DNA; a 3'-hydroxyl (OH) group at the coding end and a 5'-phosphate (PO4) group at the RSS end. The next step couples these chemical groups, binding the OH-group (on the coding end) to the PO4-group (that is sitting between the RSS and the gene segment on the opposite strand). This produces a 5'-phosphorylated double-stranded break at the RSS and a covalently closed hairpin at the coding end. The RAG proteins remain at these junctions until other enzymes repair the DNA breaks.
The RAG proteins initiate V(D)J recombination, which is essential for the maturation of pre-B and pre-T cells. Activated mature B cells also possess two other remarkable, RAG independent, phenomena of manipulating their own DNA; so-called class-switch recombination (AKA isotype switching) and somatic hypermutation (AKA affinity maturation).
Structure of RAG proteins
As with many enzymes, RAG proteins are fairly large. For example, mouse RAG-1 contains 1040 amino
acids and mouse RAG-2 contains 527 amino acids. The enzymatic activity of the RAG proteins is largely concentrated in a
core region; residues 384–1008 of RAG-1 and residues 1–387 of RAG-2 retain most of the DNA
cleavage activity. The RAG-1 core contains three
See also
References
- Janeway CA, Jr. et al (2005). Immunobiology., 6th ed., Garland Science. ISBN 0-443-07310-4.
- Abbas AK and Lichtman AH (2003). Cellular and Molecular Immunology, 5th ed., Saunders, Philadelphia. ISBN 0-7216-0008-5.
- Sadofsky M. "Recombination-activating gene proteins: more regulation, please". Immunol Rev 200: 83-9. PMID 15242398.
- De P, Rodgers K. "Putting the pieces together: identification and characterization of structural domains in the V(D)J recombination protein RAG1". Immunol Rev 200: 70-82. PMID 15242397.
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