Cutting and Pasting DNA to Create our Adaptive Immune System

31 May - 11h00 - 12h

Centre de recherche - Paris

Amphithéâtre Marie Curie

Pavillon Curie, 11 rue Pierre & Marie Curie, Paris 5ème

Description

V(D)J recombination is essential for generating the adaptive immune response and unlimited number of different antibodies and antigen receptors. Encoded by multiple V, D and J gene segments, antigen receptors are assembled by programmed double-stranded DNA cleavage and imprecise re-joining. RAG1/2 recombinase initiates the process by stochastically cleaving DNA at a pair of recombination signal sequences (RSS) bordering the V, D or J gene segments.  DNA double strand cleavage occurs in a single active site in two consecutive steps, hydrolysis and strand transfer, resulting in DNA hairpin on the coding end and DSB on the RSS side. Coding ends processing and joining to complete V, D, and J gene assembly and circularization of RSS end are carried out by the non-homologous end joining process (NHEJ). The DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK), consisting of the catalytic subunit (DNA-PKcs) and Ku70/80, is the key player in NJEJ by protecting broken DNA ends, promoting DNA hairpin end opening and also coordinating nucleotide removal, addition and DNA end ligation. In this seminar I will report the molecular mechanism of DNA cleavage by RAG1/2 and regulation of NHEJ by autophosphorylation of DNA-PKcs.

Organizers

Principal Investigator - DR2 Chun-Long Chen

Institut Curie

Scientific Project Manager Iro Triantafyllakou

Institut Curie

Speakers

Wei Yang

National Institute of Health - NIH

Invited by

Chun-Long Chen

Institut Curie

A question about the seminar?

Principal Investigator - DR2 Chun-Long Chen

Chunlong.Chen@curie.fr

Principal Investigator - DR2 Chun-Long Chen

Chunlong.Chen@curie.fr

Scientific Project Manager Iro Triantafyllakou

iro.triantafyllakou@curie.fr