Conditional IL-2 gene deletion: Consequences for T cell proliferation

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Abstract

To explore the role of interleukin-2 (IL-2) in T cell proliferation, and to circumvent the IL-2 deficiency autoimmune syndrome of conventional il2 gene deletion, mice were created to allow conditional il2 gene deletion when treated with the estrogen analog, tamox- ifen (TAM) as adults. Splenocytes from four different mouse strains, C57Bl/6 wild type (WT), conventional IL-2(-/-), TAM-treated Cre recombinase-negative (Cre-)/IL2fl/fl, and Cre recombinase-positive (Cre+)/IL2fl/fl, were activated with anti-CD3 and anti-CD28, and monitored for CD4+ and CD8+ T cell lymphocyte blastogenesis, aerobic glycolysis, BrdU incorporation into newly synthesized DNA, and CFSE dye dilution to monitor cell division. IL-2 production was monitored by quantitative ELISA and multiple additional cytokines were monitored by quantitative protein-bead arrays. Splenocytes from conventional IL-2(-/-) and TAM-treated Cre+ mice resulted in undetectable IL-2 production by ELISA, so that both strains were IL-2-deficient. As monitored by flow cytometry, activated CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from WT, Cre+, and Cre- mice all underwent blastogenesis, whereas far fewer cells from conventional IL-2(-/-) mice did so. By comparison, only cells from IL-2 sufficient WT and Cre- mice switched to aerobic glycolysis as evidenced by a drop in media pH. Blastogenesis was mirrored by BrdU incorporation and CFSE dye dilution by CD4+ and CD8+T cells from WT, Cre+, and Cre- mice, which were all equivalent, while proliferation of cells from conventional IL-2(-/-) mice was compromised. Splenocytes from IL-2 defi- cient conventional IL-2(-/-) mice produced low or undetectable other γc-chain cytokines (IL-4, IL-7, IL-9, IL-13, IL-15, and IL-21), whereas production of these γc-chain cytokines from IL-2-deficient conditional IL-2(-/-) Cre+ mice were comparable with WT and Cre- mice. These results indicate that CD4+ and CD8+ T cell blastogenesis cannot be attributable to IL-2 alone, but a switch to aerobic glycolysis was attributable to IL-2, and proliferation after CD3/CD28 activation is dependent on γc-chain cytokines, and not CD3/28 triggering per se. © 2012 Popmihajlov,Xu,Morgan, Milligan and Smith.

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Popmihajlov, Z., Xu, D., Morgan, H., Milligan, Z., & Smith, K. A. (2012). Conditional IL-2 gene deletion: Consequences for T cell proliferation. Frontiers in Immunology, 3(MAY). https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2012.00102

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