Selection and Function of CD4+ T Lymphocytes in Transgenic Mice Expressing Mutant MHC Class II Molecules Deficient in Their Interaction with CD4

  • Gilfillan S
  • Shen X
  • König3 R
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Abstract

Interactions of the T cell coreceptors, CD4 and CD8, with MHC molecules participate in regulating thymocyte development and T lymphocyte activation and differentiation to memory T cells. However, the exact roles of these interactions in normal T cell development and function remain unclear. CD4 interacts with class II MHC7 molecules via several noncontiguous regions in both the class II MHC α- and β-chains. We have introduced a double mutation that disrupts interaction with CD4 into the I-Aβk gene and used this construct to generate transgenic mice expressing only mutant class II MHC. Although CD4+ thymocytes matured to the single-positive stage in these mice, their frequency was reduced by threefold compared with that of wild-type transgenics. Positive selection of CD4+ T cells in the mutant transgenic mice may have been mediated by TCRs with a higher than usual affinity for class II MHC/Ag complexes. In Aβk mutant transgenics, peripheral CD4+ lymphocytes promoted B cell differentiation to plasma cells. These CD4+ T cells also secreted IFN-γ in response to various stimuli (e.g., protein Ag, bacterial superantigen, and alloantigen), but were deficient in IL-2 secretion. Interactions between CD4 and class II MHC molecules appeared to regulate lymphokine production, with a strong bias toward IFN-γ and against IL-2 in the absence of these interactions. Our results have implications for the manipulation of T cell-dependent immune responses.

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Gilfillan, S., Shen, X., & König3, R. (1998). Selection and Function of CD4+ T Lymphocytes in Transgenic Mice Expressing Mutant MHC Class II Molecules Deficient in Their Interaction with CD4. The Journal of Immunology, 161(12), 6629–6637. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.161.12.6629

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