Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
3356263 | Immunology Letters | 2007 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
We identified three Pax5 isoforms due to alternative splicing of the C-terminal exons of its gene in cord blood (CB)-derived B cell progenitors cultivated on the murine bone marrow stromal (HESS-5) cells. Apart from wild type (wt), one isoform skips exon 9 without subsequent frameshift (del9), while the other has a frameshift insert between exons 8 and 9, resulting in novel C-terminal sequences (ins8â²). Quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed that wt mRNA could be detected in CB CD34+ cells, but that del9 and ins8â² isoforms only appeared after 1 or 3 weeks of co-culture, respectively. Expression of each isoform mRNA was markedly upregulated during B cell differentiation in vitro, and wild type continued to be the most abundant isoform. In a luciferase reporter assay using a synthetic CD19 enhancer, del9 isoform revealed slightly lower activity and ins8â² isoform showed much lower activity, compared with Pax5-wt. Furthermore, retroviral expression of each Pax5 isoform in CB CD34+ cells induced aberrant CD19 expression in a fraction of immature myeloid cells after 1 week of culture, although del9 and ins8â² isoforms showed much less potent activity than Pax5-wt. These results suggest that Pax5-wt is quantitatively and qualitatively dominant over other C-terminal isoforms during human B cell differentiation.
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Authors
Rieko Sekine, Toshio Kitamura, Takashi Tsuji, Arinobu Tojo,