TGF-β regulation of immune homeostasis has been investigated in the context of cytokine knockout (TGF-β null) mice, in which particular TGF-β isoforms are disrupted throughout the entire organism, as well as in B and T cell-specific transgenic models, but to date the immunoregulatory effects of TGF-β have not been addressed in the context of an in vivo mouse model in which multi-isoform TGF-β signaling is abrogated in multiple leukocyte lineages while leaving nonhemopoietic tissue unaffected. Here we report the development of a murine model of TGF-β insensitivity limited to the hemopoietic tissue of adult wild-type C57BL/6 mice based on retroviral-mediated gene transfer of a dominant negative TGF-β type II receptor targeting murine bone marrow. Unlike the lymphoproliferative syndrome observed in TGF-β1-deficient mice, the disruption of TGF-β signaling in bone marrow-derived cells leads to dramatic expansion of myeloid cells, primarily monocytes/macrophages, and is associated with cachexia and mortality in lethally irradiated mice reconstituted with dominant negative receptor-transduced bone marrow. Surprisingly, there was a notable absence of T cell expansion in affected animals despite the observed differentiation of most cells in the T cell compartment to a memory phenotype. These results indicate not only that TGF-β acts as a negative regulator of immune function, but that lack of functional TGF-β signaling in the myeloid compartment of adult mice may trigger suppression of lymphocytes, which would otherwise proliferate when rendered insensitive to TGF-β.
CITATION STYLE
Shah, A. H., Tabayoyong, W. B., Kimm, S. Y., Kim, S.-J., van Parijs, L., & Lee, C. (2002). Reconstitution of Lethally Irradiated Adult Mice with Dominant Negative TGF-β Type II Receptor-Transduced Bone Marrow Leads to Myeloid Expansion and Inflammatory Disease. The Journal of Immunology, 169(7), 3485–3491. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.169.7.3485
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