TGF-beta type II receptor-deficient thymocytes develop normally but demonstrate increased CD8+ proliferation in vivo.
Per Levéen, Maria Carlsén, Anna Makowska, Saemundur Oddsson, Jonas Larsson, Marie-José Goumans, Corrado M Cilio, Stefan Karlsson
文献索引:Blood 106(13) , 4234-40, (2005)
全文:HTML全文
摘要
We have taken advantage of the Cre/lox system to generate a mouse model with inducible deficiency of transforming growth factor beta receptor II (TbetaRII). Using this approach, transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) signaling deficiency can be restricted to the hematopoietic system by bone marrow transplantation. Mice that received transplants with TbetaRII-/- bone marrow develop a lethal inflammatory disorder closely resembling that of TGF-beta1-null mice. Previous in vitro studies have suggested multiple roles for TGF-beta in T-cell development, including proliferation, apoptosis, and differentiation. We used our transplantation model to ask whether T-cell development is normal in the absence of TGF-beta signaling. The findings show for the first time in vivo and in fetal thymus organ culture (FTOC) that TGF-beta is not required for thymocytes to differentiate along the entire pathway of thymic T-cell development, as defined by the expression patterns of CD4, CD8, CD25, and CD44. In contrast to previous investigations, no increase of thymocyte apoptosis was observed. However, TbetaRII-deficient CD8+ thymocytes displayed a 2-fold increase in proliferation rate, as determined by bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation in vivo. These results reinforce the importance of TGF-beta as an immune regulator critical for T-cell function.
相关化合物
相关文献:
2015-08-01
[Genetics 200 , 1061-72, (2015)]
2011-01-01
[PLoS ONE 6(3) , e18096, (2011)]
2010-01-01
[Retrovirology 7(1) , 111, (2010)]
2008-03-01
[J. Biol. Inorg. Chem. 13 , 421-434, (2008)]
2002-02-01
[Int. J. Med. Microbiol. 291 , 545-550, (2002)]