Bacteriophage P1 Cre/loxP based systems can be used to manipulate the genomes of mice in vivo and in vitro, allowing the generation of tissue‐specific conditional mutants. Wehave generated mouse lines expressing Cre recombinase in hematopoietic tissues using the vav regulatory elements, or in lymphoid cells using the hCD2 promoter and locus control region (LCR). The R26R‐EYFP Cre reporter mouse line was used to determine the pattern of Cre expression in each line and enabled the assessment of Cre activity at a single‐cell level. Analysis showed that the vav promoter elements were able to direct Cre‐mediated recombination in all cells of the hematopoietic system. The hCD2 promoter and LCR on the other hand were able to drive Cre‐mediated recombination only in T cells and B cells, but not in other hematopoietic cell types. Furthermore, in the appropriate tissues, deletion of the floxed target was complete in all cells, thereby excluding the possibility of variegated expression of the Cre transgene. Both of these Cre‐transgenic lines will be useful in generating tissue‐specific gene deletions within all the cells of hematopoietic or lymphoid tissues.
Vav1 is a signal transducing protein required for T cell receptor (TCR) signals that drive positive and negative selection in the thymus. Furthermore, Vav1-deficient thymocytes show greatly reduced TCR-induced intracellular calcium flux. Using a novel genetic system which allows the study of signaling in highly enriched populations of CD4+CD8+ double positive thymocytes, we have studied the mechanism by which Vav1 regulates TCR-induced calcium flux. We show that in Vav1-deficient double positive thymocytes, phosphorylation, and activation of phospholipase C-γ1 (PLCγ1) is defective. Furthermore, we demonstrate that Vav1 regulates PLCγ1 phosphorylation by at least two distinct pathways. First, in the absence of Vav1 the Tec-family kinases Itk and Tec are no longer activated, most likely as a result of a defect in phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) activation. Second, Vav1-deficient thymocytes show defective assembly of a signaling complex containing PLCγ1 and the adaptor molecule Src homology 2 domain–containing leukocyte phosphoprotein 76. We show that this latter function is independent of PI3K.
A transgenic mouse was generated expressing on most (>80%) of thymocytes and
peripheral T cells a T-cell receptor isolated from a cytotoxic T-cell clone (F5). This clone
is CD8+ and recognizes αα366-374 of the nucleoprotein (NP 366-374) of influenza virus
(A/NT/60/68), in the context of Class ,MHC Db (Townsend et al., 1986). The receptor
utilizes the Vβ11 and Vα4 gene segments for the β chain and α chain, respectively
(Palmer et al., 1989). The usage of Vβ11 makes this TcR reactive to Class II IE molecules
and an endogenous ligand recently identified as a product of the endogenous mammary
tumour viruses (Mtv) 8, 9, and 11 (Dyson et al., 1991). Here we report the development
of F5 transgenic T cells and their function in mice of the appropriate MHC (C57BL/10
H-2b, IE-) or in mice expressing Class II MHC IE (e.g., CBA/Ca H-2k and BALB/c H-2d)
and the endogenous Mtv ligands. Positive selection of CD8+ T cells expressing the Vβ11
is seen in C57BL/10 transgenic mice (H-2b). Peripheral T cells from these mice are
capable of killing target cells in an antigen-dependent manner after a period of in vitro
culture with IL-2. In the presence of Class II MHC IE molecules and the endogenous
Mtv ligand, most of the single-positive cells carrying the transgenic T-cell receptor are
absent in the thymus. Unexpectedly, CD8+ peripheral T-cells in these (H-2k or H-2d) F5
mice are predominantly Vβ11 positive and also have the capacity to kill targets in an
antigen-dependent manner. This is true even following backcrossing of the F5 TcR
transgene to H-2d scid/scid mice, in which functional rearrangement of endogenous TcR
alpha- and beta-chain genes is impaired.
Inijection of mice transgenic for a class I major histocompatibility complex-restricted T-cell receptor with a soluble peptide antigen from influenza virus nucleoprotein results in clonal depletion of double-positive Immature thymocytes in the thymus and activation of mature T cells in the periphery, accompanied by a transient up-regulation of the T-cell receptor and CD3 and CD8 coreceptor molecules.
The T lymphocyte-specific protein tyrosine kinase p56lck (Lck) is an essential component of the TCR-mediated signal transduction complex. Lck knockout mice have reduced numbers of double-positive thymocytes and very few mature single-positive cells, particularly of the CD4 lineage. Here we demonstrate the ability of a tetracycline-based tissue-specific inducible Lck transgene to restore expansion of early thymocytes and maturation of single-positive cells in Lckneg mice upon induction with doxycycline. Restoration of Lck expression is particularly important for positive selection to the CD4+ lineage but has a lesser impact on selection to the CD8+ lineage, suggesting activation of Lck is an important component of the signals involved in lineage choice during thymic differentiation.
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