AUTHOR=Krantsevich Artem , Tang Catherine , MacCarthy Thomas TITLE=Correlations in Somatic Hypermutation Between Sites in IGHV Genes Can Be Explained by Interactions Between AID and/or Polη Hotspots JOURNAL=Frontiers in Immunology VOLUME=11 YEAR=2021 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/immunology/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2020.618409 DOI=10.3389/fimmu.2020.618409 ISSN=1664-3224 ABSTRACT=

The somatic hypermutation (SHM) of Immunoglobulin (Ig) genes is a key process during antibody affinity maturation in B cells. The mutagenic enzyme activation induced deaminase (AID) is required for SHM and has a preference for WRC hotspots in DNA. Error-prone repair mechanisms acting downstream of AID introduce further mutations, including DNA polymerase eta (Polη), part of the non-canonical mismatch repair pathway (ncMMR), which preferentially generates mutations at WA hotspots. Previously proposed mechanistic models lead to a variety of predictions concerning interactions between hotspots, for example, how mutations in one hotspot will affect another hotspot. Using a large, high-quality, Ig repertoire sequencing dataset, we evaluated pairwise correlations between mutations site-by-site using an unbiased measure similar to mutual information which we termed “mutational association” (MA). Interactions are dominated by relatively strong correlations between nearby sites (short-range MAs), which can be almost entirely explained by interactions between overlapping hotspots for AID and/or Polη. We also found relatively weak dependencies between almost all sites throughout each gene (longer-range MAs), although these arise mostly as a statistical consequence of high pairwise mutation frequencies. The dominant short-range interactions are also highest within the most highly mutating IGHV sub-regions, such as the complementarity determining regions (CDRs), where there is a high hotspot density. Our results suggest that the hotspot preferences for AID and Polη have themselves evolved to allow for greater interactions between AID and/or Polη induced mutations.