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Characterisation of a K390R ITK Kinase Dead Transgenic Mouse – Implications for ITK as a Therapeutic Target

Interleukin-2 inducible tyrosine kinase (ITK) is expressed in T cells and plays a critical role in signalling through the T cell receptor. Evidence, mainly from knockout mice, has suggested that ITK plays a particularly important function in Th2 cells and this has prompted significant efforts to dis...

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Autores principales: Deakin, Angela, Duddy, Graham, Wilson, Steve, Harrison, Steve, Latcham, Judi, Fulleylove, Mick, Fung, Sylvia, Smith, Jason, Pedrick, Mike, McKevitt, Tom, Felton, Leigh, Morley, Joanne, Quint, Diana, Fattah, Dilniya, Hayes, Brian, Gough, Jade, Solari, Roberto
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4174519/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25250764
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0107490
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author Deakin, Angela
Duddy, Graham
Wilson, Steve
Harrison, Steve
Latcham, Judi
Fulleylove, Mick
Fung, Sylvia
Smith, Jason
Pedrick, Mike
McKevitt, Tom
Felton, Leigh
Morley, Joanne
Quint, Diana
Fattah, Dilniya
Hayes, Brian
Gough, Jade
Solari, Roberto
author_facet Deakin, Angela
Duddy, Graham
Wilson, Steve
Harrison, Steve
Latcham, Judi
Fulleylove, Mick
Fung, Sylvia
Smith, Jason
Pedrick, Mike
McKevitt, Tom
Felton, Leigh
Morley, Joanne
Quint, Diana
Fattah, Dilniya
Hayes, Brian
Gough, Jade
Solari, Roberto
author_sort Deakin, Angela
collection PubMed
description Interleukin-2 inducible tyrosine kinase (ITK) is expressed in T cells and plays a critical role in signalling through the T cell receptor. Evidence, mainly from knockout mice, has suggested that ITK plays a particularly important function in Th2 cells and this has prompted significant efforts to discover ITK inhibitors for the treatment of allergic disease. However, ITK is known to have functions outside of its kinase domain and in general kinase knockouts are often not good models for the behaviour of small molecule inhibitors. Consequently we have developed a transgenic mouse where the wild type Itk allele has been replaced by a kinase dead Itk allele containing an inactivating K390R point mutation (Itk-KD mice). We have characterised the immune phenotype of these naive mice and their responses to airway inflammation. Unlike Itk knockout (Itk(−/−)) mice, T-cells from Itk-KD mice can polymerise actin in response to CD3 activation. The lymph nodes from Itk-KD mice showed more prominent germinal centres than wild type mice and serum antibody levels were significantly abnormal. Unlike the Itk(−/−), γδ T cells in the spleens of the Itk-KD mice had an impaired ability to secrete Th2 cytokines in response to anti-CD3 stimulation whilst the expression of ICOS was not significantly different to wild type. However ICOS expression is markedly increased on αβCD3(+) cells from the spleens of naïve Itk-KD compared to WT mice. The Itk-KD mice were largely protected from inflammatory symptoms in an Ovalbumin model of airway inflammation. Consequently, our studies have revealed many similarities but some differences between Itk(−/−)and Itk-KD transgenic mice. The abnormal antibody response and enhanced ICOS expression on CD3+ cells has implications for the consideration of ITK as a therapeutic target.
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spelling pubmed-41745192014-10-02 Characterisation of a K390R ITK Kinase Dead Transgenic Mouse – Implications for ITK as a Therapeutic Target Deakin, Angela Duddy, Graham Wilson, Steve Harrison, Steve Latcham, Judi Fulleylove, Mick Fung, Sylvia Smith, Jason Pedrick, Mike McKevitt, Tom Felton, Leigh Morley, Joanne Quint, Diana Fattah, Dilniya Hayes, Brian Gough, Jade Solari, Roberto PLoS One Research Article Interleukin-2 inducible tyrosine kinase (ITK) is expressed in T cells and plays a critical role in signalling through the T cell receptor. Evidence, mainly from knockout mice, has suggested that ITK plays a particularly important function in Th2 cells and this has prompted significant efforts to discover ITK inhibitors for the treatment of allergic disease. However, ITK is known to have functions outside of its kinase domain and in general kinase knockouts are often not good models for the behaviour of small molecule inhibitors. Consequently we have developed a transgenic mouse where the wild type Itk allele has been replaced by a kinase dead Itk allele containing an inactivating K390R point mutation (Itk-KD mice). We have characterised the immune phenotype of these naive mice and their responses to airway inflammation. Unlike Itk knockout (Itk(−/−)) mice, T-cells from Itk-KD mice can polymerise actin in response to CD3 activation. The lymph nodes from Itk-KD mice showed more prominent germinal centres than wild type mice and serum antibody levels were significantly abnormal. Unlike the Itk(−/−), γδ T cells in the spleens of the Itk-KD mice had an impaired ability to secrete Th2 cytokines in response to anti-CD3 stimulation whilst the expression of ICOS was not significantly different to wild type. However ICOS expression is markedly increased on αβCD3(+) cells from the spleens of naïve Itk-KD compared to WT mice. The Itk-KD mice were largely protected from inflammatory symptoms in an Ovalbumin model of airway inflammation. Consequently, our studies have revealed many similarities but some differences between Itk(−/−)and Itk-KD transgenic mice. The abnormal antibody response and enhanced ICOS expression on CD3+ cells has implications for the consideration of ITK as a therapeutic target. Public Library of Science 2014-09-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4174519/ /pubmed/25250764 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0107490 Text en © 2014 Deakin et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Deakin, Angela
Duddy, Graham
Wilson, Steve
Harrison, Steve
Latcham, Judi
Fulleylove, Mick
Fung, Sylvia
Smith, Jason
Pedrick, Mike
McKevitt, Tom
Felton, Leigh
Morley, Joanne
Quint, Diana
Fattah, Dilniya
Hayes, Brian
Gough, Jade
Solari, Roberto
Characterisation of a K390R ITK Kinase Dead Transgenic Mouse – Implications for ITK as a Therapeutic Target
title Characterisation of a K390R ITK Kinase Dead Transgenic Mouse – Implications for ITK as a Therapeutic Target
title_full Characterisation of a K390R ITK Kinase Dead Transgenic Mouse – Implications for ITK as a Therapeutic Target
title_fullStr Characterisation of a K390R ITK Kinase Dead Transgenic Mouse – Implications for ITK as a Therapeutic Target
title_full_unstemmed Characterisation of a K390R ITK Kinase Dead Transgenic Mouse – Implications for ITK as a Therapeutic Target
title_short Characterisation of a K390R ITK Kinase Dead Transgenic Mouse – Implications for ITK as a Therapeutic Target
title_sort characterisation of a k390r itk kinase dead transgenic mouse – implications for itk as a therapeutic target
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4174519/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25250764
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0107490
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