AI Article Synopsis

  • Genetic screens are used to find important genes related to immune cell development, using zebrafish as an effective model due to their genetic similarities to humans.
  • A transposon system was employed to create mutations in the zebrafish genome, allowing researchers to tag and identify cells expressing disrupted genes, leading to the discovery of 12 lines with green fluorescent protein (GFP) expressing hematopoietic tissues.
  • Further analysis revealed specific gene disruptions that impede T cell development, with two genes, agtpbp1 and eps15L1, identified as crucial for proper T cell functioning.

Article Abstract

Genetic screens are a powerful tool to discover genes that are important in immune cell development and function. The evolutionarily conserved development of lymphoid cells paired with the genetic tractability of zebrafish make this a powerful model system for this purpose. We used a Tol2-based gene-breaking transposon to induce mutations in the zebrafish (Danio rerio, AB strain) genome, which served the dual purpose of fluorescently tagging cells and tissues that express the disrupted gene and provided a means of identifying the disrupted gene. We identified 12 lines in which hematopoietic tissues expressed green fluorescent protein (GFP) during embryonic development, as detected by microscopy. Subsequent analysis of young adult fish, using a novel approach in which single cell suspensions of whole fish were analyzed by flow cytometry, revealed that 8 of these lines also exhibited GFP expression in young adult cells. An additional 15 lines that did not have embryonic GFP+ hematopoietic tissue by microscopy, nevertheless exhibited GFP+ cells in young adults. RT-PCR analysis of purified GFP+ populations for expression of T and B cell-specific markers identified 18 lines in which T and/or B cells were fluorescently tagged at 6 weeks of age. As transposon insertion is expected to cause gene disruption, these lines can be used to assess the requirement for the disrupted genes in immune cell development. Focusing on the lines with embryonic GFP+ hematopoietic tissue, we identified three lines in which homozygous mutants exhibited impaired T cell development at 6 days of age. In two of the lines we identified the disrupted genes, agtpbp1 and eps15L1. Morpholino-mediated knockdown of these genes mimicked the T cell defects in the corresponding mutant embryos, demonstrating the previously unrecognized, essential roles of agtpbp1 and eps15L1 in T cell development.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4498767PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0131908PLOS

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