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The T cell response of HLA-DR transgenic mice to human myelin basic protein and other antigens in the presence and absence of human CD4

Analysis of HLA class II transgenic mice has progressed in recent years from analysis of single chain HLA class II transgenes with expression of mixed mouse/human heterodimers to double transgenic mice expressing normal human heterodimers. Previous studies have used either HLA transgenic mice in whi...

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Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1995
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2191922/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7532684
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collection PubMed
description Analysis of HLA class II transgenic mice has progressed in recent years from analysis of single chain HLA class II transgenes with expression of mixed mouse/human heterodimers to double transgenic mice expressing normal human heterodimers. Previous studies have used either HLA transgenic mice in which there is a species-matched interaction with CD4 or mice which lack this interaction. Since both systems are reported to generate HLA-restricted responses, the matter of the requirement for species-matched CD4 remains unclear. We have generated triple transgenic mice expressing three human transgenes, DRA, DRB, and CD4, and compared HLA-restricted responses to peptide between human- CD4+ (Hu-CD4+) and Hu-CD4- littermates. We saw no difference between Hu- CD4+ and Hu-CD4- groups, supporting the notion that for some responses at least the requirement for species-matched CD4 may not be absolute. Evidence for positive selection of mouse T cell receptors in HLA-DR transgenic mice came both from the acquisition of new, HLA-restricted responses to various peptides and from an increased frequency of T cells using the TCR V beta 4 gene segment. An important goal with respect to the analysis of function in HLA transgenic mice is the clarification of mechanisms which underpin the recognition of self- antigens in human autoimmune disease. As a first step towards 'humanized' disease models in HLA transgenic mice, we analyzed the responses of HLA-DR transgenic mice to the human MPB 139-154 peptide which has been implicated as an epitope recognized by T cells of multiple sclerosis patients. We obtained T cell responses to this epitope in transgenic mice but not in nontransgenic controls. This study suggests that HLA transgenic mice will be valuable in the analysis of HLA-restricted T cell epitopes implicated in human disease and possibly in the design of new disease models.
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spelling pubmed-21919222008-04-16 The T cell response of HLA-DR transgenic mice to human myelin basic protein and other antigens in the presence and absence of human CD4 J Exp Med Articles Analysis of HLA class II transgenic mice has progressed in recent years from analysis of single chain HLA class II transgenes with expression of mixed mouse/human heterodimers to double transgenic mice expressing normal human heterodimers. Previous studies have used either HLA transgenic mice in which there is a species-matched interaction with CD4 or mice which lack this interaction. Since both systems are reported to generate HLA-restricted responses, the matter of the requirement for species-matched CD4 remains unclear. We have generated triple transgenic mice expressing three human transgenes, DRA, DRB, and CD4, and compared HLA-restricted responses to peptide between human- CD4+ (Hu-CD4+) and Hu-CD4- littermates. We saw no difference between Hu- CD4+ and Hu-CD4- groups, supporting the notion that for some responses at least the requirement for species-matched CD4 may not be absolute. Evidence for positive selection of mouse T cell receptors in HLA-DR transgenic mice came both from the acquisition of new, HLA-restricted responses to various peptides and from an increased frequency of T cells using the TCR V beta 4 gene segment. An important goal with respect to the analysis of function in HLA transgenic mice is the clarification of mechanisms which underpin the recognition of self- antigens in human autoimmune disease. As a first step towards 'humanized' disease models in HLA transgenic mice, we analyzed the responses of HLA-DR transgenic mice to the human MPB 139-154 peptide which has been implicated as an epitope recognized by T cells of multiple sclerosis patients. We obtained T cell responses to this epitope in transgenic mice but not in nontransgenic controls. This study suggests that HLA transgenic mice will be valuable in the analysis of HLA-restricted T cell epitopes implicated in human disease and possibly in the design of new disease models. The Rockefeller University Press 1995-03-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2191922/ /pubmed/7532684 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
The T cell response of HLA-DR transgenic mice to human myelin basic protein and other antigens in the presence and absence of human CD4
title The T cell response of HLA-DR transgenic mice to human myelin basic protein and other antigens in the presence and absence of human CD4
title_full The T cell response of HLA-DR transgenic mice to human myelin basic protein and other antigens in the presence and absence of human CD4
title_fullStr The T cell response of HLA-DR transgenic mice to human myelin basic protein and other antigens in the presence and absence of human CD4
title_full_unstemmed The T cell response of HLA-DR transgenic mice to human myelin basic protein and other antigens in the presence and absence of human CD4
title_short The T cell response of HLA-DR transgenic mice to human myelin basic protein and other antigens in the presence and absence of human CD4
title_sort t cell response of hla-dr transgenic mice to human myelin basic protein and other antigens in the presence and absence of human cd4
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2191922/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7532684