1. Gene
  2. Igh - immunoglobulin heavy chain complex Gene

Igh - immunoglobulin heavy chain complex Gene

Mus musculus
Gene ID: 111507 | Gene type: protein coding

About Igh

Summary

Summary:Immunoglobulins recognize foreign antigens and initiate immune responses such as phagocytosis and the Complement System. Each immunoglobulin molecule consists of two identical heavy chains and two identical light chains. This region represents the germline organization of the heavy chain locus. The locus includes V (variable), D (diversity), J (joining), and C (constant) segments. During B cell development, a recombination event at the DNA level joins a single D segment with a J segment; this partially rearranged D-J gene is then joined to a V segment. The rearranged V-D-J is then transcribed with the IGHM constant region; this transcript encodes a mu heavy chain. Later in development B cells generate V-D-J-Cmu-Cdelta pre-messenger RNA, which is alternatively spliced to encode either a mu or a delta heavy chain. Mature B cells in the lymph nodes undergo switch recombination, so that the V-D-J gene is brought in proximity to one of the IGHG, IGHA, or IGHE genes and each cell expresses either the gamma, alpha, or epsilon heavy chain. Recombination of many different V segments with several J segments provides a wide range of antigen recognition. Additional diversity is attained by junctional diversity, resulting from the random additional of nucleotides by terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase, and by somatic hypermutation, which occurs during B cell maturation in the spleen and lymph nodes. The RefSeq represents the IGH locus from C57BL/6. Several V and D segments in C57BL/6 are known to be incapable of encoding a protein and are considered pseudogenes. [provided by RefSeq, Jul 2008]

Protein Preferred Names Protein Names

immunoglobulin heavy chain complex

Orthologs Information

Species Symbol Source ID
Homo sapiens Igh NCBI NCBI:3492
Canis familiaris Igh NCBI
Susscrofa domestica Igh NCBI
Leporidae Igh NCBI
Rattus norvegicus Igh NCBI
Macaca mulatta Igh NCBI