A BLOCK IN BOTH EARLY T-LYMPHOCYTE AND NATURAL-KILLER-CELL DEVELOPMENT IN TRANSGENIC MICE WITH HIGH-COPY NUMBERS OF THE HUMAN CD3E GENE

Citation
Bp. Wang et al., A BLOCK IN BOTH EARLY T-LYMPHOCYTE AND NATURAL-KILLER-CELL DEVELOPMENT IN TRANSGENIC MICE WITH HIGH-COPY NUMBERS OF THE HUMAN CD3E GENE, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United Statesof America, 91(20), 1994, pp. 9402-9406
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Multidisciplinary Sciences
ISSN journal
00278424
Volume
91
Issue
20
Year of publication
1994
Pages
9402 - 9406
Database
ISI
SICI code
0027-8424(1994)91:20<9402:ABIBET>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
A severe immunodeficiency involving a complete loss of T lymphocytes a nd natural killer cells was observed in independent lines of transgeni c mice containing > 30 copies of the human CD3E gene (pL12). T-cell(-) natural killer (NK)(-) mice could also be generated by using a gene f ragment pL12 Delta 1 (without exons 4A and 5) coding for the CD3-epsil on transmembrane region and its 55-amino acid nonenzymatic cytoplasmic tail. The abnormally small thymus gland in the homozygous transgenic animals, which was approximate to 1% the size of a wild-type thymus, c ontained only a few (2-4%) prethymocytes with a Thy-1(+)Pgp-1(+)IL-2R alpha(-)CD3(-)4(-)8(-) phenotype. In mice with lower copy numbers of t he transgene thymocyte development was blocked at the Thy-1(+)Pgp-1(-) IL-2R alpha(+)CD3(-)4(-)8(-) stage, and normal NK activity was detecte d. Mice generated with high-copy numbers of a transgene pL12 Delta 2 ( pL12 Delta 1 minus exons 6), coding for a truncated protein from which the CD3-epsilon extracellular domain, its transmembrane region, and m ost of its cytoplasmic region were absent, contained normal numbers of T lymphocytes and NK cells. These transgene effects suggested that re cruitment of signal-transduction molecules by the cytoplasmic tail of this protein played an important role in the abrogation of both lineag es. Taken together these observations support the notion that T lympho cytes and NK cells stemmed from a common precursor.