A point mutation in the Tlr4 gene, which encodes Toll-like receptor 4, has recently been proposed to underlie LPS hyporesponsiveness in C3H/HeJ mice (Lpsd). The data presented herein demonstrate that F1 progeny from crosses between mice that carry a ∼9-cM deletion of chromosome 4 (including deletion of LpsTlr4) and C3H/HeJ mice (i.e., Lps0 × Lpsd F1 mice) exhibit a pattern of LPS sensitivity, measured by TNF activity, that is indistinguishable from that exhibited by Lpsn × Lpsd F1 progeny and whose average response is “intermediate” to parental responses. Thus, these data provide clear functional support for the hypothesis that the C3H/HeJ defect exerts a dominant negative effect on LPS sensitivity; however, expression of a normal Toll-like receptor 4 molecule is apparently not required.
CITATION STYLE
Vogel, S. N., Johnson, D., Perera, P.-Y., Medvedev, A., Larivière, L., Qureshi, S. T., & Malo, D. (1999). Cutting Edge: Functional Characterization of the Effect of the C3H/HeJ Defect in Mice that Lack an Lps n Gene: In Vivo Evidence for a Dominant Negative Mutation. The Journal of Immunology, 162(10), 5666–5670. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.162.10.5666
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