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Dive into the research topics where Kefei Yu is active.

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Featured researches published by Kefei Yu.


Nature Immunology | 2003

R-loops at immunoglobulin class switch regions in the chromosomes of stimulated B cells

Kefei Yu; Frédéric Chédin; Chih-Lin Hsieh; Thomas E. Wilson; Michael R. Lieber

The mechanism responsible for immunoglobulin class switch recombination is unknown. Previous work has shown that class switch sequences have the unusual property of forming RNA-DNA hybrids when transcribed in vitro. Here we show that the RNA-DNA hybrid structure that forms in vitro is an R-loop with a displaced guanine (G)-rich strand that is single-stranded. This R-loop structure exists in vivo in B cells that have been stimulated to transcribe the γ3 or the γ2b switch region. The length of the R-loops can exceed 1 kilobase. We propose that this distinctive DNA structure is important in the class switch recombination mechanism


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Generation and characterization of endonuclease G null mice.

Ryan A. Irvine; Noritaka Adachi; Darryl Shibata; Geoffrey D. Cassell; Kefei Yu; Zarir E. Karanjawala; Chih-Lin Hsieh; Michael R. Lieber

ABSTRACT Endonuclease G (endo G) is one of the most abundant nucleases in eukaryotic cells. It is encoded in the nucleus and imported to the mitochondrial intermembrane space. This nuclease is active on single- and double-stranded DNA. We genetically disrupted the endo G gene in mice without disturbing a conserved, overlapping gene of unknown function that is oriented tail to tail with the endo G gene. In these mice, the production of endo G protein is not detected, and the disruption abolishes the nuclease activity of endo G. The absence of endo G has no effect on mitochondrial DNA copy number, structure, or mutation rate over the first five generations. There is also no obvious effect on nuclear DNA degradation in standard apoptosis assays. The endo G null mice are viable and show no age-related or generational abnormalities anatomically or histologically. We infer that this highly conserved protein has no mitochondrial or apoptosis function that can discerned by the assays described here and that it may have a function yet to be determined. The early embryonic lethality of endo G null mice recently reported by others may be due to the disruption of the gene that overlaps the endo G gene.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008

Mechanism of R-Loop Formation at Immunoglobulin Class Switch Sequences

Deepankar Roy; Kefei Yu; Michael R. Lieber

ABSTRACT R-loops have been described in vivo at the immunoglobulin class switch sequences and at prokaryotic and mitochondrial origins of replication. However, the biochemical mechanism and determinants of R-loop formation are unclear. We find that R-loop formation is nearly eliminated when RNase T1 is added during transcription but not when it is added afterward. Hence, rather than forming simply as an extension of the RNA-DNA hybrid of normal transcription, the RNA must exit the RNA polymerase and compete with the nontemplate DNA strand for an R-loop to form. R-loops persist even when transcription is done in Li+ or Cs+, which do not support G-quartet formation. Hence, R-loop formation does not rely on G-quartet formation. R-loop formation efficiency decreases as the number of switch repeats is decreased, although a very low level of R-loop formation occurs at even one 49-bp switch repeat. R-loop formation decreases sharply as G clustering is reduced, even when G density is kept constant. The critical level for R-loop formation is approximately the same point to which evolution drove the G clustering and G density on the nontemplate strand of mammalian switch regions. This provides an independent basis for concluding that the primary function of G clustering, in the context of high G density, is R-loop formation.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2008

Altered kinetics of nonhomologous end joining and class switch recombination in ligase IV–deficient B cells

Li Han; Kefei Yu

Immunoglobulin heavy chain class switch recombination (CSR) is believed to occur through the generation and repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) in the long and repetitive switch regions. Although implied, the role of the major vertebrate DSB repair pathway, nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ), in CSR has been controversial. By somatic gene targeting of DNA ligase IV (Lig4; a key component of NHEJ) in a B cell line (CH12F3) capable of highly efficient CSR in vitro, we found that NHEJ is required for efficient CSR. Disruption of the Lig4 gene in CH12F3 cells severely inhibits the initial rate of CSR and causes a late cell proliferation defect under cytokine stimulation. However, unlike V(D)J recombination, which absolutely requires NHEJ, CSR accumulates to a substantial level in Lig4-null cells. The data revealed a fast-acting NHEJ and a slow-acting alterative end joining of switch region breaks during CSR.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007

Sequence Dependence of Chromosomal R-Loops at the Immunoglobulin Heavy-Chain Sμ Class Switch Region

Feng Ting Huang; Kefei Yu; Barbara B. Balter; Erik Selsing; Zeliha Oruc; Ahmed Amine Khamlichi; Chih-Lin Hsieh; Michael R. Lieber

ABSTRACT The mechanism by which the cytidine deaminase activation-induced deaminase (AID) acts at immunoglobulin heavy-chain class switch regions during mammalian class switch recombination (CSR) remains unclear. R-loops have been proposed as a basis for this targeting. Here, we show that the difference between various forms of the Sμ locus that can or cannot undergo CSR correlates well with the locations and detectability of R-loops. The Sμ R-loops can initiate hundreds of base pairs upstream of the core repeat switch regions, and the area where the R-loops initiate corresponds to the zone where the AID mutation frequency begins to rise, despite a constant density of WRC sites in this region. The frequency of R-loops is 1 in 25 alleles, regardless of the presence of the core Sμ repeats, again consistent with the initiation of most R-loops upstream of the core repeats. These findings explain the surprisingly high levels of residual CSR in B cells from mice lacking the core Sμ repeats but the marked reduction in CSR in mice with deletions of the region upstream of the core Sμ repeats. These studies also provide the first analysis of how R-loop formation in the eukaryotic chromosome depends on the DNA sequence.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

The Nicking Step in V(D)J Recombination Is Independent of Synapsis: Implications for the Immune Repertoire

Kefei Yu; Michael R. Lieber

ABSTRACT In all of the transposition reactions that have been characterized thus far, synapsis of two transposon ends is required before any catalytic steps (strand nicking or strand transfer) occur. In V(D)J recombination, there have been inconclusive data concerning the role of synapsis in nicking. Synapsis between two 12-substrates or between two 23-substrates has not been ruled out in any studies thus far. Here we provide the first direct tests of this issue. We find that immobilization of signals does not affect their nicking, even though hairpinning is affected in a manner reflecting its known synaptic requirement. We also find that nicking is kinetically a unireactant enzyme-catalyzed reaction. Time courses are no different between nicking seen for a 12-substrate alone and a reaction involving both a 12- and a 23-substrate. Hence, synapsis is neither a requirement nor an effector of the rate of nicking. These results establish V(D)J recombination as the first example of a DNA transposition-type reaction in which catalytic steps begin prior to synapsis, and the results have direct implications for the order of the steps in V(D)J recombination, for the contribution of V(D)J recombination nicks to genomic instability, and for the diversification of the immune repertoire.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Fine-structure analysis of activation-induced deaminase accessibility to class switch region R-loops.

Kefei Yu; Deepankar Roy; Melina Z. Bayramyan; Ian S. Haworth; Michael R. Lieber

ABSTRACT Activation-induced deaminase (AID) is essential for class switch recombination and somatic hypermutation, and it has the ability to deaminate single-stranded DNA at cytidines. Mammalian class switch regions form R-loops upon transcription in the physiological orientation. The displaced DNA strand of an R-loop is forced to wrap around the RNA-DNA hybrid; hence, it may not have complete exposure to proteins. A fundamental question concerns the extent to which AID is accessible to the displaced strand of a transcription-generated R-loop. We used a minimal R-loop to carry out high-resolution analysis of the precise locations of AID action. We found that AID deaminates on the displaced DNA strand across the entire length of the R-loop. Displaced strand locations with a WRC (where W is A or T and R is A or G) sequence are preferred targets, but there are clear exceptions. These WRC deviations may be due to steric constraints on the accessibility of AID to these sites as the displaced strand twists around the RNA-DNA duplex. This phenomenon may explain the lack of WRC site preference at the mutations surrounding class switch recombination junctions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Overlapping activation-induced cytidine deaminase hotspot motifs in Ig class-switch recombination

Li Han; Shahnaz Masani; Kefei Yu

Ig class-switch recombination (CSR) is directed by the long and repetitive switch regions and requires activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID). One of the conserved switch-region sequence motifs (AGCT) is a preferred site for AID-mediated DNA-cytosine deamination. By using somatic gene targeting and recombinase-mediated cassette exchange, we established a cell line-based CSR assay that allows manipulation of switch sequences at the endogenous locus. We show that AGCT is only one of a family of four WGCW motifs in the switch region that can facilitate CSR. We go on to show that it is the overlap of AID hotspots at WGCW sites on the top and bottom strands that is critical. This finding leads to a much clearer model for the difference between CSR and somatic hypermutation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2013

Apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 is the essential nuclease during immunoglobulin class switch recombination

Shahnaz Masani; Li Han; Kefei Yu

ABSTRACT Immunoglobulin (Ig) class switch recombination (CSR) is initiated by activation-induced cytidine deaminase (AID) that catalyzes numerous DNA cytosine deaminations within switch regions. The resulting uracils are processed by uracil base excision and/or mismatch repair enzymes that ultimately generate switch region DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). Uracil glycosylase 2 (UNG2) is required for CSR, most likely by removing uracils to generate abasic sites. Although it is presumed that the apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1) generates DNA strand incisions (a prerequisite for CSR) at these abasic sites, a direct test of the requirement for APE1 in CSR has been difficult because of the embryonic lethality of APE1 ablation in mice. Here, we report the successful deletion of the APE1 gene in a mouse B cell line (CH12F3) capable of robust CSR in vitro. In contrast to the general assumption that APE1 is essential for cellular viability, deletion of APE1 in CH12F3 cells has no apparent effect on cell viability or growth. Moreover, CSR in APE1-null CH12F3 cells is drastically reduced, providing direct evidence for an essential role for APE1 in switch region cleavage and CSR. Finally, deletion of AP endonuclease 2 (APE2) has no effect on CSR in either APE1-proficient or -deficient cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1999

MECHANISTIC BASIS FOR CODING END SEQUENCE EFFECTS IN THE INITIATION OF V(D)J RECOMBINATION

Kefei Yu; Michael R. Lieber

ABSTRACT V(D)J recombination is directed by recombination signal sequences. However, the flanking coding end sequence can markedly affect the frequency of the initiation of V(D)J recombination in vivo. Here we demonstrate that the coding end sequence effect can be qualitatively and quantitatively recapitulated in vitro with purified RAG proteins. We find that coding end sequence specifically affects the nicking step, which is the first biochemical step in RAG-mediated cleavage. The subsequent hairpin formation step is not affected by the coding end sequence. Furthermore, the coding end sequence effect can be ablated by prenicking the substrate, indicating that the coding end effect is specific to the nicking step. In reactions in which both 12- and 23-substrates are present, a suboptimal coding end sequence on one signal can slow down hairpin formation at the partner signal, a result consistent with models in which coordination between the signals occurs at the hairpin formation step. The coding end sequence effect on nicking and the coupling of the 12- and 23-substrates explains how hairpin formation can be rate limiting for some 12/23 pairs, whereas nicking can be rate limiting when low-efficiency coding end sequences are involved.

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Michael R. Lieber

University of Southern California

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Li Han

Michigan State University

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Chih-Lin Hsieh

University of Southern California

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Shahnaz Masani

Michigan State University

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Zheng Z. Zhang

University of Southern California

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Deepankar Roy

University of Southern California

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Feng Ting Huang

University of Southern California

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Nicholas R. Pannunzio

University of Southern California

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Alex Taghva

University of Southern California

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Katheryn Meek

Michigan State University

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