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Showing papers by "Takeshi Tokuhisa published in 1996"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Expression of the invariant V alpha 14/J alpha 281, but not V alpha 1, TCR in transgenic mice lacking endogenous TCR alpha expression blocks the development of conventional T alpha beta cells and leads to the preferential development of Valpha 14 NK T cells, suggesting a prerequisite role of invariant T cell antigen receptor alpha chain (TCR alpha) in NK T cell development.
Abstract: NK1.1+ T [natural killer (NK) T] cells express an invariant T cell antigen receptor alpha chain (TCR alpha) encoded by V alpha 14 and J alpha 281 segments in association with a limited number of V betas, predominantly V beta 8.2. Expression of the invariant V alpha 14/J alpha 281, but not V alpha 1, TCR in transgenic mice lacking endogenous TCR alpha expression blocks the development of conventional T alpha beta cells and leads to the preferential development of V alpha 14 NK T cells, suggesting a prerequisite role of invariant V alpha 14 TCR in NK T cell development. In V beta 8.2 but not B beta 3 transgenic mice, two NK T cells with different CD3 epsilon expressions, CD3 epsilon(dim) and CD3 epsilon(high), can be identified. CD3 epsilon(high) NK T cells express surface V alpha 14/V beta 8 TCR, indicating a mature cell type, whereas CD3 epsilon(dim) NK T cells express V beta 8 without V alpha 14 TCR and no significant CD3 epsilon expression (CD3 epsilon(dim)) on the cell surface. However, the latter are positive for recombination activating gene (RAG-1 and RAG-2) mRNA, which are only expressed in the precursor or immature T cell lineage, and also possess CD3 epsilon mRNA in their cytoplasm, suggesting that CD3 epsilon(dim) NK T cells are the precursor of V alpha 14 NK T cells.

107 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that BCL6 plays a role in keratinocytes at terminal differentiation stage, and that this gene is induced after stimulation and progressively up-regulated in these cells.

36 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, fetal liver (FL) cells from transgenic mice carrying an IFN-alphabeta (IFN)-inducible c-fos gene were cultured on a stromal cell layer with IL-7.
Abstract: The proto-oncogene product c-Fos, a component of the transcription factor AP-1, is induced in early B lineage cells. To investigate a role of c-Fos in early B cell development, fetal liver (FL) cells from transgenic mice carrying an IFN-alphabeta (IFN)-inducible c-fos gene (Mx-c-fosD) were cultured on a stromal cell layer with IL-7. Although B lineage cells normally developed in the Mx-c-fosD FL cell culture, the development was perturbed by the addition of IFN at the beginning of culture. When IFN was added in the FL culture after B lineage cells developed, pro-B (B220+,CD43+) cells were selectively dying by apoptosis within 48 h after IFN stimulation. This apoptosis was intrinsically induced in the pro-B cells that overexpressed c-fos when the Mx-c-fosD FL (H-2Kb) cells were cocultured with the normal C3H FL (H-2Kk) cells. The molecular basis of the apoptosis was investigated by examining expression of the genes that regulate apoptosis. The IFN stimulation did not modulate expression of Bcl-2 and Fas in early B lineage cells from the Mx-c-fosD FL culture. However, Rag-2 was down-regulated in these cells within 12 h after IFN stimulation. These results suggest that the c-Fos plays a causal role in deletion of pro-B cells with nonfunctional Ag receptor.

21 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results suggest that the c-Fos plays a role as a negative regulator in the early B cell development.

8 citations