T-cell receptor gamma delta and gamma transgenic mice suggest a role of a gamma gene silencer in the generation of alpha beta T cells.

I. Ishida(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Sjef Verbeek(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Marc Bonneville(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Shigeyoshi Itohara(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Anton Berns(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Susumu Tonegawa(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
April 1, 1990
Cited by 127Open Access

Abstract

A T lymphocyte expresses on its surface one of two types of antigen receptor, T-cell receptor alpha beta or T-cell receptor gamma delta, encoded by a pair of somatically rearranged alpha and beta or gamma and delta genes. It has been suggested that alpha beta T cells are generated only from precursor T cells that failed to rearrange gamma and delta genes in a functional form. However, we found that transgenic mice constructed with functionally rearranged gamma and delta genes produce a normal number of alpha beta T cells. The transgene gamma present in these alpha beta T cells is repressed apparently through an associated cis DNA element (silencer). We propose that some T-cell precursors are committed to generate alpha beta T cells independent of the rearrangement status of their gamma gene and that this commitment involves activation of a factor(s) that interacts with the gamma gene-associated silencer.


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