Early B cell factor (EBF) is a critical regulator of B lymphocyte-specific gene transcription. EBF functions, in part, by binding to regulatory sites of genes required for the pre-B- and mature B cell receptors. These DNA targets include the promoters of the mb-1 and Vpreb1 genes that encode Ig-alpha and one of the components of surrogate light chain, respectively.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntigen-stimulated B lymphocytes undergo genetic and phenotypic changes in germinal centers (GCs), including affinity maturation of immunoglobulin (Ig) genes and Ig heavy chain isotype switching. Expression of the Germinal Center Expressed Transcript (GCET) gene is up-regulated in murine GC B cells. The human homolog of GCET, HGAL/GCET2, is an important prognostic marker for staging lymphomas derived from GCs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCd79a (called mb-1 here) encodes the Ig-alpha signaling component of the B cell receptor. The early B cell-specific mb-1 promoter was hypermethylated at CpG dinucleotides in hematopoietic stem cells but became progressively unmethylated as B cell development proceeded. The transcription factor Pax5 activated endogenous mb-1 transcription in a plasmacytoma cell line, but could not when the promoter was methylated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPax-5, a member of the paired domain family of transcription factors, is a key regulator of B lymphocyte-specific transcription and differentiation. A major target of Pax-5-mediated activation is the mb-1 gene, which encodes the essential transmembrane signaling protein Ig-alpha. Pax-5 recruits three members of the Ets family of transcription factors: Ets-1, Fli-1 and GABPalpha (with GABPbeta1), to assemble ternary complexes on the mb-1 promoter in vitro.
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