
Rahemtulla A, Fung-Leung WP, Schilham MW, Kundig TM, Sambhara SR, Narendran A, Arabian A, Wakeham A, Paige CJ, Zinkernagel RM, et al:
Normal development and function of CD8+ cells but markedly decreased
helper cell activity in mice lacking CD4.
Nature 1991 Sep 12;353(6340):180-4
ABSTRACT
T cells express T-cell antigen receptors (TCR) for the recognition
of antigen in conjunction with the products of the major
histocompatibility complex. They also express two key surface
coreceptors, CD4 and CD8, which are involved in the interaction with
their ligands. As CD4 is expressed on the early haemopoietic
progenitor as well as the early thymic precursor cells, a role for
CD4 in haemopoiesis and T-cell development is implicated. Thymocytes
undergo a series of differentiation and selection steps to become
mature CD4+8- or CD4-8+ (single positive) T cells. Studies of the
role of CD4+ T cells in vivo have been based on adoptive transfer of
selected or depleted lymphocytes, or in vivo treatment of
thymectomized mice with monoclonal antibodies causing depletion of
CD4+ T cells. In order to study the role of the CD4 molecule in the
development and function of lymphocytes, we have disrupted the CD4
gene in embryonic stem cells by homologous recombination. Germ-line
transmission of the mutation produces mutant mouse strains that do
not express CD4 on the cell surface. In these mice, the development
of CD8+ T cells and myeloid components is unaltered, indicating that
expression of CD4 on progenitor cells and CD4+ CD8+ (double
positive) thymocytes is not obligatory. Here we report that these
mice have markedly decreased helper cell activity for antibody
responses, although cytotoxic T-cell activity against viruses is in
the normal range. This differential requirement for CD4+ helper T
cells is important to our understanding of immune disorders
including AIDS, in which CD4+ cells are reduced or absent.