To test the possibility that the crosslinkage of molecules expressing a transmembrane region derived from the membrane form of the mu immunoglobulin heavy chain would be sufficient for signal transduction in B cells, a chimeric gene (Kk-mu) consisting of extracellular exons of the class I gene H-2Kk and the transmembrane and cytosolic exons of the mu constant region gene was introduced into WEHI-231 B lymphoma cells and into mouse blastocysts. A protein consistent with the predicted product of the Kk-mu gene was expressed in a transfected cell clone (S18) and in transgenic mice. Crosslinkage of Kk-mu protein with soluble, Sepharose-bound, or dextran-conjugated anti-H-2Kk antibodies failed to induce the accumulation of inositol phosphates or to elevate intracellular calcium concentrations in either S18 cells or B lymphocytes from transgenic mice. Furthermore, crosslinkage of Kk-mu did not inhibit growth of S18 cells or stimulate DNA synthesis by transgenic B cells, in the presence or absence of interleukin-4. The failure of crosslinkage of Kk-mu to initiate detectable intracellular biochemical change or to effect cellular growth suggests that simple crosslinkage of molecules expressing the mu transmembrane region is not sufficient to transduce signals in B cells.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0008-8749(92)90007-cDOI Listing

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