Skip to main content
Developmental Immunology logoLink to Developmental Immunology
. 1990;1(1):53–57. doi: 10.1155/1990/56014

Immunoglobulin λ Gene Rearrangement Can Precede κ Gene Rearrangement

Jörg Berg 1, Mindy Mcdowell 1, Hans-Martin Jäck 1, Matthias Wabl 1,
PMCID: PMC2275820  PMID: 2136205

Abstract

Immunoglobulin genes are generated during differentiation of B lymphocytes by joining gene segments. A mouse pre-B cell contains a functional immunoglobulin heavy-chain gene, but no light-chain gene. Although there is only one heavy-chain locus, there are two lightchain loci: κ and λ.It has been reported that κ loci in the germ-line configuration are never (in man) or very rarely (in the mouse) present in cells with functionally rearranged λ-chain genes. Two explanations have been proposed to explain this: (a) the ordered rearrangement theory, which postulates that light-chain gene rearrangement in the pre-B cell is first attempted at the κ locus, and that only upon failure to produce a functional κ chain is there an attempt to rearrange the λ locus; and (b) the stochastic theory, which postulates that rearrangement at the λ locus proceeds at a rate that is intrinsically much slower than that at the κ locus. We show here that λ-chain genes are generated whether or not the κ locus has lost its germ-line arrangement, a result that is compatible only with the stochastic theory.

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (557.9 KB).


Articles from Developmental Immunology are provided here courtesy of Wiley

RESOURCES