Literature DB >> 10490100

SOCS1 deficiency causes a lymphocyte-dependent perinatal lethality.

J C Marine1, D J Topham, C McKay, D Wang, E Parganas, D Stravopodis, A Yoshimura, J N Ihle.   

Abstract

SOCS1 is an SH2-containing protein that is primarily expressed in thymocytes in a cytokine- and T cell receptor-independent manner. SOCS1 deletion causes perinatal lethality with death by 2-3 weeks. During this period thymic changes include a loss of cellularity and a switch from predominantly CD4+ CD8+ to single positive cells. Peripheral T cells express activation antigens and proliferate to IL-2 in the absence of anti-CD3. In addition, IFNgamma is present in the serum. Reconstitution of the lymphoid lineage of JAK3-deficient mice with SOCS1-deficient stem cells recapitulates the lethality and T cell alterations. Introducing a RAG2 or IFNgamma deficiency eliminates lethality. The results demonstrate that lymphocytes are critical to SOCS1-associated perinatal lethality and implicate SOCS1 in lymphocyte differentiation or regulation.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10490100     DOI: 10.1016/s0092-8674(00)80048-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell        ISSN: 0092-8674            Impact factor:   41.582


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