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Autocrine expression of interleukin‐7 rescues lymphoid expansion in interleukin‐7‐deficient mice
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Citations
31
References
1997
Year
The murine interleukin-7 (IL-7) gene was disrupted to examine the role of IL-7 in the lymphoid system. Expansion of lymphoid cells is sharply curtailed in IL-7-deficient mice. This is evident in a dramatic reduction but not elimination of lymphoid cells in the thymus, bone marrow and spleen. The few thymocytes present express CD4 and/or CD8 markers associated with T-cell maturation. Similarly, a limited number of B cells detected in the bone marrow rearrange and express immunoglobulin genes. Small but distinct populations of B and T cells are found in the spleens of IL-7-deficient mice. Thus the signal transmitted by IL-7 plays a central role in the expansion of lymphocytes while it is not absolutely required for their maturation. A transgene that directs expression of IL-7 to lymphoid cells was found to restore the numbers of thymocytes, bone marrow B-cell progenitors and splenic lymphocytes of IL-7-deficient mice to approximately normal levels. This genetic complementation confirms that the lymphoid defect is specifically due to the absence of IL-7 and demonstrates that the expansion of lymphoid cells in an organism is regulated by their exposure to IL-7.
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