PAX5

Author: Prof. Dr. med. Peter Altmeyer

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Last updated on: 29.08.2021

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Definition
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PAX5 is a transcription factor essential for the commitment of lymphoid progenitor cells to the B-lymphocyte lineage. PAX5 fulfills a kind of dual role by repressing "inappropriate" B-lineage genes and simultaneously activating B-lineage-specific genes. This transcriptional reprogramming restricts the broad signaling capacity of unattached progenitors to the B-cell signaling pathway, regulates cell adhesion and migration, induces VH-DJH recombination, facilitates (pre)B-cell receptor signaling, and promotes development to the mature B-cell stage.

Inactivation of PAX5 in early and late B lymphocytes demonstrated that PAX5 plays an essential role in controlling B cell identity and function throughout B lymphopoiesis. PAX5 has also been demonstrated in human B-cell malignancies, being deregulated by chromosomal translocations in a subset of acute lymphoblastic leukemias and non-Hodgkin lymphomas.

Immunohistologically, PAX5 functions as a nuclear marker for B lymphocytes and is an alternative to CD20 and CD79a.

Literature
This section has been translated automatically.

  1. Hantschke M et al (2016) Immunohistological techniques. In: L. Cerroni et al. histopathology of the skin. Springer Publishing House Berlin-Heidelberg p. 31.

Incoming links (2)

PAX5 gene; Plasma cell;

Outgoing links (2)

CD20; Cd79a;

Authors

Last updated on: 29.08.2021