AI Article Synopsis

  • Various methods like MHC tetramers and cytokine assays are commonly used to identify activated T cells, but the new strategy proposed allows tracking T cells responding to any antigen.
  • This method employs a retroviral double-reporter system using EGFP for cell identification and HcRed for marking T cells activated by infection or inflammation.
  • The study successfully demonstrated this approach by reconstituting T cells in RAG1 deficient mice and tracking their response to Listeria monocytogenes, offering a flexible means to investigate other immune responses.

Article Abstract

Various methods have been used to identify activated T cells such as binding of MHC tetramers and expression of cell surface markers in addition to cytokine-based assays. In contrast to these published methods, we here describe a strategy to identify T cells that respond to any antigen and track the fate of these activated T cells. We constructed a retroviral double-reporter construct with enhanced green fluorescence protein (EGFP) and a far-red fluorescent protein from Heteractis crispa (HcRed). LTR-driven EGFP expression was used to enrich and identify transduced cells, while HcRed expression is driven by the CD40Ligand (CD40L) promoter, which is inducible and enables the identification and cell fate tracing of T cells that have responded to infection/inflammation. Pax5 deficient pro-B cells that can give rise to different hematopoietic cells like T cells, were retrovirally transduced with this double-reporter cassette and were used to reconstitute the T cell pool in RAG1 deficient mice that lack T and B cells. By using flow cytometry and histology, we identified activated T cells that had developed from Pax5 deficient pro-B cells and responded to infection with the bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes. Microscopic examination of organ sections allowed visual identification of HcRed-expressing cells. To further characterize the immune response to a given stimuli, this strategy can be easily adapted to identify other cells of the hematopoietic system that respond to infection/inflammation. This can be achieved by using an inducible reporter, choosing the appropriate promoter, and reconstituting mice lacking cells of interest by injecting gene-modified Pax5 deficient pro-B cells.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2660435PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0005115PLOS

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