reviewAnnual Review of ImmunologyMar 27, 2008GREEN OA

Mechanism and Regulation of Class Switch Recombination

University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Antibody class switching occurs in mature B cells in response to antigen stimulation and costimulatory signals. It occurs by a unique type of intrachromosomal deletional recombination within special G-rich tandem repeated DNA sequences [called switch, or S, regions located upstream of each of the heavy chain constant (C(H)) region genes, except Cdelta]. The recombination is initiated by the B cell-specific activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID), which deaminates cytosines in both the donor and acceptor S regions. AID activity converts several dC bases to dU bases in each S region, and the dU bases are then excised by the uracil DNA glycosylase UNG; the resulting abasic sites are nicked by…

Citation impact

1,091
total citations
FWCI
26.73
Percentile
100%
References
226
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Biology
  • Cytidine deaminase
  • AP site
  • Activation-induced (cytidine) deaminase
  • Immunoglobulin class switching
  • DNA
  • Base excision repair
  • DNA ligase
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