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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Lack of intermediate-affinity interleukin-2 receptor in mice leads to dependence on interleukin-2 receptor alpha, beta and gamma chain expression for T cell growth.

An interleukin (IL)-4 dependent mouse T cell clone 8.2 derived from an IL-2-dependent T cell line was characterized. As measured by flow cytometric analysis and Northern blotting, it expresses IL-2 receptor beta (IL-2R beta) and gamma (IL-2R gamma) chains, but has lost expression of IL-2 receptor alpha chain (IL-2R alpha). To investigate the properties of the mouse IL-2R beta gamma complex and the role of IL-2R alpha gene expression, this clone was further studied. T cell clone 8.2 has lost the capacity to bind 125I-labeled human IL-2 under experimental conditions able to detect intermediate-affinity IL-2R in human cells. Mouse IL-2 is unable to block the binding of mAb TM beta 1 to 8.2 cells. Under the same experimental conditions, mouse IL-2 blocks the binding of TM beta 1 to C30-1 cells expressing the IL-2 alpha beta gamma complex. Since TM beta 1 recognizes an epitope related to the IL-2 binding site of IL-2R beta, these results can be taken as a demonstration that mouse IL-2R beta gamma does not bind mouse IL-2. Furthermore, T cell clone 8.2 does not proliferate in response to recombinant mouse or human IL-2. On the other hand, T cell transfectant lines expressing heterospecific receptors made of the human IL-2R beta and mouse IL-2R gamma chains bind 125I- labeled human IL-2 and proliferate in response to IL-2. This establishes the difference between mouse and human IL-2R beta chains. Transfection of T cell clone 8.2 with human IL-2R alpha genes restores their capacity to proliferate in response to IL-2. In addition, all transfectants grown in IL-2 express the endogeneous mouse IL-2R alpha chain. When grown in IL-4, the endogeneous mouse IL-2R alpha gene remains silent in all these transfectants. These results show that, contrary to the human, the mouse does not express an intermediate-affinity IL-2R. Expression of the IL-2R alpha gene is therefore required for the formation of the functional IL-2R in mice.[1]

References

  1. Lack of intermediate-affinity interleukin-2 receptor in mice leads to dependence on interleukin-2 receptor alpha, beta and gamma chain expression for T cell growth. Chastagner, P., Moreau, J.L., Jacques, Y., Tanaka, T., Miyasaka, M., Kondo, M., Sugamura, K., Thèze, J. Eur. J. Immunol. (1996) [Pubmed]
 
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