Somatic generation of antibody diversity

S Tonegawa - Nature, 1983 - nature.com
Nature, 1983nature.com
In the genome of a germ-line cell, the genetic information for an immunoglobulin polypeptide
chain is contained in multiple gene segments scattered along a chromosome. During the
development of bone marrow-derived lymphocytes, these gene segments are assembled by
recombination which leads to the formation of a complete gene. In addition, mutations are
somatically introduced at a high rate into the amino-terminal region. Both somatic
recombination and mutation contribute greatly to an increase in the diversity of antibody …
Abstract
In the genome of a germ-line cell, the genetic information for an immunoglobulin polypeptide chain is contained in multiple gene segments scattered along a chromosome. During the development of bone marrow-derived lymphocytes, these gene segments are assembled by recombination which leads to the formation of a complete gene. In addition, mutations are somatically introduced at a high rate into the amino-terminal region. Both somatic recombination and mutation contribute greatly to an increase in the diversity of antibody synthesized by a single organism.
nature.com