Molly Bogue
Baylor College of Medicine
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Publication
Featured researches published by Molly Bogue.
Cell | 1996
Chengming Zhu; Molly Bogue; Dae-Sik Lim; Paul Hasty; David Roth
Ku is a heterodimeric DNA end binding complex composed of 70 and 86 kDa subunits. Here, we show that Ku86 is essential for normal V(D)J recombination in vivo, as Ku86-deficient mice are severely defective for formation of coding joints. Unlike severe combined immunodeficient (scid) mice, Ku86-deficient mice are also defective for signal joint formation. Both hairpin coding ends and blunt full-length signal ends accumulate. Contrary to expectation, Ku86 is evidently not required for protection of either type of V(D)J recombination intermediate. Instead, V(D)J recombination appears to be arrested after the cleavage step in Ku86-deficient mice. We suggest that Ku86 may be required to remodel or disassemble DNA-protein complexes containing broken ends, making them available for further processing and joining.
Immunity | 1997
Molly Bogue; Chiyu Wang; Chengming Zhu; David Roth
Ku, a heterodimer of 70 and 86 kDa subunits, plays a critical but poorly understood role in V(D)J recombination. Although Ku86-deficient mice are defective in coding and signal joint formation, rare recombination products have been detected by PCR. Here, we report nucleotide sequences of 99 junctions from Ku86-deficient mice. Over 90% of the coding joints, but not signal or hybrid joints, exhibit short sequence homologies, indicating that homology is required to join coding ends in the absence of Ku86. Our results suggest that Ku86 may normally have distinct functions in the formation of these different types of junctions. Furthermore, Ku86(-/-) joints are unexpectedly devoid of N-region diversity, suggesting a novel role for Ku in the addition of N nucleotides by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase.
Current Opinion in Immunology | 1996
Molly Bogue; David Roth
THe V(D)J recombination reaction can be separated into two fundamental operations: site specific cleavage and joining of broken ends. Much has been learned about the mechanisms of these steps in the past few years. Recent experiments have shown that cleavage is catalyzed by the RAG1 and RAG2 proteins and generates an asymmetric set of broken ends: hairpin coding ends and blunt signal ends. A cell free system capable of performing cleavages has been established, and detailed biochemical information about the reaction should accumulate rapidly. In vivo studies have provided insights into the regulation of cleavage. Recent experiments using artificial recombination substrates in cultured cells have shown that efficient cleavage requires a pair of RSS, one with a 12 nucleotide spacer and one with a 23 nucleotide spacer. Our understanding of the joining mechanism has also increased substantially, as several proteins involved in coding joint and signal joint formation (as well as in DSB repair) were recently identified.
The EMBO Journal | 1991
Molly Bogue; S Candéias; Christophe Benoist; Diane Mathis
According to several functional criteria, the mature thymocytes of neonatal and adult mice are distinctly different. We wondered whether these differences in function might have a structural correlate: do neonates have a distinct repertoire of alpha:beta T cells? In this study, we have exploited the power of polymerase chain reaction technology to generate large numbers of T cell receptor sequences from sorted thymocyte populations from newborn and adult mice. The newborn‐derived sequences show very few N nucleotide additions, usually the major source of diversity in T cell receptors. Most interestingly, the paucity of N insertions appears to be exaggerated by selection events that operate during T cell differentiation in the thymus. The significance of these results is largely: (i) that they parallel recent findings on the B cell repertoire in neonates, raising questions about the reactivities specified by such a special repertoire; and (ii) that they suggest a means to ‘tag’ T cells exported perinatally, allowing one to test the premise that autoreactive T cells derive preferentially from the newborn repertoire.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Markus Feuerer; Wenyu Jiang; Phillip D. Holler; Ansuman T. Satpathy; Christopher L. Campbell; Molly Bogue; Diane Mathis; Christophe Benoist
FoxP3+CD4+ regulatory T cells (Tregs) play a key role in the maintenance of peripheral self-tolerance, and it has been suggested that diabetes-susceptible nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice are defective in the generation and numbers of Tregs. We found thymic selection of Tregs to be under genetic control. Fetal thymic organ cultures on the NOD background required 3- to 10-fold more antigen than corresponding cultures on the B6 background for optimal induction of Tregs, but once the threshold for induction was reached the NOD background yielded close to 10-fold more Tregs. This increased selection of Tregs was also found in nontransgenic NOD mice in fetal through adult stages. This trait did not map to the MHC, idd3, or the chromosome 3 (Chr3) regions that control clonal deletion, but mainly to two regions on Chr1 and Chr11. Thus, NOD mice do not have a global defect in the generation or maintenance of Tregs; if anything, they show the opposite.
Journal of Immunology | 2014
Andrianna Ortiz-Lopez; Molly Bogue; Kimie Hattori; Cristina Pop; Daphne Koller; Diane Mathis; Christophe Benoist
To determine the breadth and underpinning of changes in immunocyte gene expression due to genetic variation in mice, we performed, as part of the Immunological Genome Project, gene expression profiling for CD4+ T cells and neutrophils purified from 39 inbred strains of the Mouse Phenome Database. Considering both cell types, a large number of transcripts showed significant variation across the inbred strains, with 22% of the transcriptome varying by 2-fold or more. These included 119 loci with apparent complete loss of function, where the corresponding transcript was not expressed in some of the strains, representing a useful resource of “natural knockouts.” We identified 1222 cis-expression quantitative trait loci (cis-eQTL) that control some of this variation. Most (60%) cis-eQTLs were shared between T cells and neutrophils, but a significant portion uniquely impacted one of the cell types, suggesting cell type–specific regulatory mechanisms. Using a conditional regression algorithm, we predicted regulatory interactions between transcription factors and potential targets, and we demonstrated that these predictions overlap with regulatory interactions inferred from transcriptional changes during immunocyte differentiation. Finally, comparison of these and parallel data from CD4+ T cells of healthy humans demonstrated intriguing similarities in variability of a gene’s expression: the most variable genes tended to be the same in both species, and there was an overlap in genes subject to strong cis-acting genetic variants. We speculate that this “conservation of variation” reflects a differential constraint on intraspecies variation in expression levels of different genes, either through lower pressure for some genes, or by favoring variability for others.
Journal of Immunology | 1999
Gregory R. Harriman; Molly Bogue; Pamela Rogers; Milton J. Finegold; Susan E. Pacheco; Allan Bradley; Yongxin Zhang; Innocent N. Mbawuike
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1992
Molly Bogue; Susan Gilfillan; Christophe Benoist; Diane Mathis
Genes & Development | 1996
Molly Bogue; Chengming Zhu; Estuardo Aguilar-Cordova; Lawrence A. Donehower; David Roth
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998
Molly Bogue; Chamelli Jhappan; David Roth