Novel mouse models based on intersectional genetics to identify and characterize plasmacytoid dendritic cells

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Abstract

Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) are the main source of type I interferon (IFN-I) during viral infections. Their other functions are debated, due to a lack of tools to identify and target them in vivo without affecting pDC-like cells and transitional DCs (tDCs), which harbor overlapping phenotypes and transcriptomes but a higher efficacy for T cell activation. In the present report, we present a reporter mouse, pDC-Tom, designed through intersectional genetics based on unique Siglech and Pacsin1 coexpression in pDCs. The pDC-Tom mice specifically tagged pDCs and, on breeding with Zbtb46GFP mice, enabled transcriptomic profiling of all splenic DC types, unraveling diverging activation of pDC-like cells versus tDCs during a viral infection. The pDC-Tom mice also revealed initially similar but later divergent microanatomical relocation of splenic IFN+ versus IFN− pDCs during infection. The mouse models and specific gene modules we report here will be useful to delineate the physiological functions of pDCs versus other DC types.

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Valente, M., Collinet, N., Vu Manh, T. P., Popoff, D., Rahmani, K., Naciri, K., … Dalod, M. (2023). Novel mouse models based on intersectional genetics to identify and characterize plasmacytoid dendritic cells. Nature Immunology, 24(4), 714–728. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-023-01454-9

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