Evidence that productive rearrangements of TCR γ genes influence the commitment of progenitor cells to differentiate into αβ or γδ T cells — Joonsoo Kang (1995) | RDL Network
Abstract Two models have been considered to account for the differentiation of γδ and αβ T cells from a common hematopoietic progenitor cell. In one model, progenitor cells commit to a lineage before T cell receptor (TCR) rearrangement occurs. In the other model, progenitor cells first undergo rearrangement of TCRγ, δ, or both genes, and cells that succeed in generating a functional receptor commit to the γδ lineage, while those that do not proceed to attempt complete β and subsequently α gene rearrangements. A prediction of the latter model is that TCRγ rearrangements present in αβ T cells will be nonproductive. We tested this hypothesis by examining Vγ2‐Jγ1Cγ1 rearrangements, which are commonly found in αβ T cells. The results indicate that Vγ2‐Jγ1Cγ1 rearrangements in purified αβ T cell populations are almost all nonproductive. The low frequency of productive rearrangements of Vγ2 in αβ T cells is apparently not due to a property of the rearrangement machinery, because a transgenic rearrangement substrate, in which the Vγ2 gene harbored a frame‐shift mutation that prevents expression at the protein level, was often rearranged in a productive configuration in αβ T cells. The results suggest that progenitor cells which undergo productive rearrangement of their endogenous Vγ2 gene are selectively excluded from the αβ T cell lineage.
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