Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

The recombinase activating genes: architects of immune diversity during lymphocyte development

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY(2023)

Cited 1|Views2
No score
Abstract
The mature lymphocyte population of a healthy individual has the remarkable ability to recognise an immense variety of antigens. Instead of encoding a unique gene for each potential antigen receptor, evolution has used gene rearrangements, also known as variable, diversity, and joining gene segment (V(D)J) recombination. This process is critical for lymphocyte development and relies on recombination-activating genes-1 (RAG1) and RAG2, here collectively referred to as RAG. RAG serves as powerful genome editing tools for lymphocytes and is strictly regulated to prevent dysregulation. However, in the case of dysregulation, RAG has been implicated in cases of cancer, autoimmunity and severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). This review examines functional protein domains and motifs of RAG, describes advances in our understanding of the function and (dys)regulation of RAG, discuss new therapeutic options, such as gene therapy, for RAG deficiencies, and explore in vitro and in vivo methods for determining RAG activity and target specificity.
More
Translated text
Key words
BCR,B cell receptor,TCR,T cell receptor,rearrangements of immunoglobulin and T cell receptor genes,gene therapy (GT),thymus,bone marrow,Recombination activating genes
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined