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Brief Definitive Reports |

Wellcome Trust Immunology Unit, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB2 2SP, United Kingdom
| Abstract |
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Key Words: interleukin 13 IgE interleukin 4 T cells thymus
Cytokines, it is clear, can modulate B cell function by differentially stimulating specific Ig isotype production. Consequently, if antigenic challenge elicits a Th1 cell response characterized by high levels of IFN-
In this paper, we describe the production of IL-13 transgenic mouse lines and present data confirming a role for IL-13 in the development of an IL-4–independent IgE response.
RNA Analysis.
Cytokine and Ig ELISAs.
Analysis of IL-13 Production.
Immunofluorescent Flow Cytometry.
, there is an associated increase in the level of IgG2a production. Similarly, immune responses developing a Th2 cell phenotype exhibit high levels of IL-4 and develop elevated serum IgE and IgG1 (for a review, see reference 1). The intrinsic role played by IgE in the development of asthma and allergic responses highlights the importance of understanding the mechanisms controlling its production. IL-4 was believed to be solely responsible for the expression of IgE in the mouse (2–6); however, recent studies using IL-4–deficient mice have clearly shown that IgE can be generated in the complete absence of IL-4 (7, 8), indicating that other mechanisms can mediate IgE production in mice. The discovery of IL-13 and the demonstration that this cytokine could also induce IgE production by human B cells established that a further layer of complexity existed in the regulation of IgE (9–11). IL-13 is a cytokine produced predominantly by Th2 and mast cells, and it shares structural and functional similarities with IL-4 (12, 13). Significantly, addition of IL-13 to in vitro assays has so far failed to induce IgE production by mouse B cells, leading to reports that IL-13 cannot regulate IgE in the mouse (13).
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Materials and Methods
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Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results and Discussion
References
Generation of IL-13 Transgenic Mice.
A 6.0-kb BamHI-digested genomic DNA fragment containing the complete mouse IL-13 gene (14) was cloned into a BamHI site upstream of the human CD2 locus control region (LCR; reference 15) in the vector GSE1515 (supplied by Dimitris Kioussis, National Institute for Medical Research, London, UK). The IL-13 and CD2 LCR gene fusion was isolated as an 11.5-kb NotI fragment and injected into eggs. Transgenic mice (strain CBA x C57BL/6) were generated using standard protocols (16). Transgenic mice were identified using Southern blot analysis of genomic DNA hybridized with the CD2 LCR or the mouse IL-13 cDNA (12). In the experiments presented, transgenic lines IL13Tg431 and IL13Tg478 had been backcrossed four times onto strain C57BL/6. IL13Tg431 mice were crossed with IL-4–deficient mice (A.N.J. McKenzie, unpublished data) or IL-4T (5) to derive IL-13Tg+/IL-4–/– offspring. In all experiments presented, transgenic mice were compared with wild-type littermate controls. Mice were maintained in a specific pathogen–free animal facility.
Total RNA was isolated from muscle, kidney, spleen, thymus, bone marrow, heart, and liver using RNAzolB (Biotecx, Biogenesis Laboratories, Poole, UK). Reverse transcription (RT)-PCR primers for IL-13 were 5'-GGGTGACTGCAGTCCTGGCT-3' and 5'-GCTGGAGACCGTAGTGGG-3'. Hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) primers and conditions were as described previously (17).
Serum Igs were assayed using sandwich ELISA. 96-well plates were coated with anti-Ig isotype capture mAbs, and bound Ig of diluted serum samples was detected using biotinylated anti-Ig isotype detection mAbs (PharMingen, San Diego, CA). Concentrations were calculated using purified Igs as standards (PharMingen). The IL-13 ELISA was purchased from R&D Systems (Abingdon, UK).
LN cells were resuspended at 2 x 106 cells/ml in RPMI 1640 glutamax medium (GIBCO BRL, Paisley, UK), supplemented with 0.05 mM 2-ME, 100 U/ml penicillin, 100 µg/ml streptomycin, and 10% FCS, or this medium supplemented with Con A (2 µg/ml). After incubation, supernatants were harvested and assayed for the presence of IL-13 using ELISA.
Single cell suspensions were prepared from thymus, spleen, and LN. Cells were stained with FITC–anti-CD4 Ab (clone H129.19) and PE–anti-CD8 Ab (clone 53-6.7) and analyzed by flow cytometry (FACSCalibur®; Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA). LN cells were stained with FITC–anti-CD45R/B220 (clone RA3-6B2) and PE–anti-CD23 Ab (clone B3B4). For three-color staining, thymocytes were stained with FITC–anti-CD4, FITC–anti-CD8, FITC–anti-CD3
(clone 2C11), PE–anti-CD44 (clone IM7), and biotin-conjugated anti-CD25 (clone H129.19, detected with streptavidin–Cy-Chrome). All Abs were purchased from PharMingen.
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Results and Discussion
Top
Abstract
Materials and Methods
Results and Discussion
References
Inducible Tissue-specific IL-13 Expression in IL-13 Transgenic Mouse Lines.
Since IL-13 is primarily produced by T cells, we chose to facilitate transgene expression in the T lymphocyte compartment. To achieve this, we cloned the native mouse IL-13 gene containing
3 kb of upstream sequence into the 5' region of the human CD2 LCR (Fig. 1 A). Using egg injection, several transgenic founders were generated that varied in the number of integrated copies of the IL-13 gene. Three founders were used to establish independent transgenic lines denoted IL13Tg431 (
6 copies of the transgene), IL13Tg478 (
10 copies), and IL13Tg520 (
15 copies), which were analyzed in more detail. Although the data from IL13Tg520 were consistent with those obtained with the other two transgenic lines, they are not presented here because we have determined that the transgenes in this line are on the Y chromosome, thus preventing the use of sex-matched littermate controls.
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Serum Ig Analysis.
Total serum IgE from naive animals was highly elevated in both of the IL-13 transgenic lines. Indeed, IgE levels were 10-fold greater than normal in IL13Tg431 mice and up to 100-fold higher than normal in the IL13Tg478 animals (Fig. 2 A), indicating that IgE levels increased with the number of integrated copies of the IL-13 gene. In contrast, total serum Ig titers of IgG1, IgG2a, IgG2b, IgA, and IgM were similar in the wild-type, IL13Tg431 (Fig. 2 A), and IL-13Tg478 mice (data not shown). The elevated levels of IgE in the IL-13 transgenics were readily detected in mice at 3, 6, and >10 wk of age (data not shown). Thus, IL-13 expression induces a highly specific upregulation of IgE.
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Coincident with the increase in IgE production, we also observed an elevation in the expression levels of CD23 on B220+ cells from mesenteric LNs (Fig. 2 C) and spleen (data not shown) of IL-13 transgenic mice. These data contrast with a report in which IL-13 failed to modulate CD23 on mouse B cells in vitro (13), but are in agreement with reports that IL-13 can upregulate CD23 on human B cells (11). We have also found that CD23 expression is lower on B cells from IL-13–deficient mice (our unpublished observations). Therefore, our data indicate that in vivo IL-13 can also regulate other facets of the IgE response by B cells.
Perturbation of Thymocyte Development.
Thymocyte development in IL-13 transgenic mice was severely affected as the mice aged. Thymocyte populations from 1- and 4-wk-old transgenic animals developed normally (data not shown); however, by 6 wk of age, thymocyte numbers in the thymi of IL-13 transgenic animals began to fall to
50– 75% of normal. By 10 wk of age, the number of thymocytes was reduced to
10% of normal thymocyte number, although thymus size appeared normal. Analysis using the T cell markers CD4 and CD8 indicated that the most significant thymocyte loss was from the CD4+CD8+ subset in the thymi of IL-13 transgenic mice, although CD4+CD8– and CD4–CD8+ cell numbers were also reduced (Fig. 3 A). The numbers of CD4–CD8– cells in the thymus remained equivalent in the IL-13 transgenic mice and their wild-type littermates. However, when CD4–CD8–CD3– cells were analyzed for their expression of the T cell developmental markers CD44 and CD25, the wild-type cells comprised a significantly greater proportion of more mature CD44+CD25+ cells compared with the IL-13 transgenics, which displayed far more cells in the immature CD44+CD25– population (Fig. 3 B). Histologic sectioning of 10-wk-old thymi from IL-13 transgenics and their wild-type littermates revealed a severe breakdown in normal thymus architecture in the IL-13 transgenic animals. Whereas the littermate controls exhibited normal thymic structure consisting of cortex and medulla (Fig. 4, A and C), thymi from IL-13 transgenic mice contained diffuse foci of thymocyte development surrounded by substantial areas of epithelial structure devoid of thymocytes (Fig. 4, B and D).
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The apparently normal thymocyte profiles generated from the IL-13 transgenic animals up to 4 wk of age demonstrate that normal thymocyte development occurs unhindered during the early development of the thymus; however, as evidenced by the severe depletion of thymocytes from 6 through to 10 wk, IL-13 is able to affect the typical differentiation of immature thymocytes through the CD4+CD8+ stage. Furthermore, we have found that inclusion of IL-13 into in vitro fetal thymic organ cultures also results in an inhibition of thymocyte development (data not shown). However, it remains to be determined whether IL-13 acts directly on the T cell populations or if it mediates its effects by regulating other cell types such as thymic epithelial cells.
Several other transgenic mouse lines expressing a range of factors, including soluble cytokines (21–23), transcription factors (24), or inflammatory molecules (25), have been reported to develop thymus phenotypes similar to that we have observed in the IL-13 transgenics. Hormones such as estrogen can also produce a profound reduction in the numbers of double positive thymocytes (23), as can the administration of glucocorticosteroids (26). Although the final outcome on thymocyte populations may appear similar in these disparate models, it seems likely that they arise by different mechanisms, and that the CD4+CD8+ thymocyte subset is uniquely sensitive to modulatory stimuli for reasons that have yet to be elucidated. It is noteworthy that IL-4 transgenic mice also develop an arrest in the normal development of CD4+CD8+ thymocytes in the thymus, with a coincident breakdown in the typical structure of thymic medulla and cortex (18, 19, 21). However, despite the reduction in numbers of CD4+ CD8+ thymocytes in IL-4 transgenic mice, these animals, unlike the IL-13 transgenics described here, are not reported to have large areas of the thymus devoid of thymocytes. Furthermore, in contrast to the IL-13 transgenics, IL-4 transgenic animals are reported to have losses in peripheral CD4+ T cells (19) or peripheral CD8+ T cells (18, 21) depending on the promoter used to control transgene expression.
Our data demonstrate that expression of IL-13 in vivo can modulate IgE production even in the absence of IL-4, and that the apparent discrepancies between the roles of IL-13 in the murine and human systems appear to be due to features inherent in the in vitro assay systems used for their analysis. Thus, IL-13 transgenic animals represent an important tool for defining the in vivo regulation of IgE by IL-4 and IL-13 in disease.
| Acknowledgments |
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Submitted: 31 March 1998
Revised: 11 May 1998
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