6533b7ddfe1ef96bd1273f2c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Catchup: a mouse model for imaging-based tracking and modulation of neutrophil granulocytes

Joachim R. GöthertPegah SeddighZeinab AbdullahFranziska NeumannAri WaismanMike HasenbergAnika KlingbergSabrina KlebowMichaela SeelingSwen EngelmannSven BrandauAnnegret ReinholdAnja HasenbergLinda MännAndreas KrausManuel StecherLars BorkensteinBurkhart SchravenDaniel R. EngelMatthias GunzerFalk Nimmerjahn

subject

MaleProgrammed cell deathGenotypeNeutrophilsTransgeneMedizinCre recombinaseMice TransgenicPeritonitisBiologyBiochemistryMiceCell MovementAnimalsAntigens LyTransgenesMolecular BiologyMice KnockoutCell DeathGene Transfer TechniquesCell BiologyCell movementMolecular biologyMice Inbred C57BLGene Expression RegulationFemaleReactive Oxygen SpeciesBiotechnology

description

Neutrophil granulocyte biology is a central issue of immunological research, but the lack of animal models that allow for neutrophil-selective genetic manipulation has delayed progress. By modulating the neutrophil-specific locus Ly6G with a knock-in allele expressing Cre recombinase and the fluorescent protein tdTomato, we generated a mouse model termed Catchup that exhibits strong neutrophil specificity. Transgene activity was found only in very few eosinophils and basophils and was undetectable in bone marrow precursors, including granulomonocytic progenitors (GMPs). Cre-mediated reporter-gene activation allowed for intravital two-photon microscopy of neutrophils without adoptive transfer. Homozygous animals were Ly6G deficient but showed normal leukocyte cellularity in all measured organs. Ly6G-deficient neutrophils were functionally normal in vitro and in multiple models of sterile or infectious inflammation in vivo. However, Cre-mediated deletion of FcγRIV in neutrophils reduced the cells' recruitment to immune-complex-mediated peritonitis, suggesting a cell-intrinsic role for activating Fc receptors in neutrophil trafficking.

https://doi.org/10.1038/nmeth.3322