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Immunology o f Nude Mice Author Miroslav Holub Head, Experimental Immunology Group Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine Prague, Czechoslovakia Boca Raton London New York CRC Press is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business CRC Press Taylor & Francis Group 6000 Broken Sound Parkway NW, Suite 300 Boca Raton, FL 33487-2742 Reissued 2019 by CRC Press © 1989 by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC CRC Press is an imprint of Taylor & Francis Group, an lnforma business No claim to original U.S. Government works This book contains information obtained from authentic and highly regarded sources. Reasonable efforts have been made to publish reliable data and information, but the author and publisher cannot assume responsibility for the validity of all materials or the consequences of their use. The authors and publishers have attempted to trace the copyright holders of all material reproduced in this publication and apologize to copyright holders if permission to publish in this form has not been obtained. If any copyright material has not been acknowledged please write and let us know so we may rectify in any future reprint. Except as permitted under U.S. Copyright Law, no part of this book may be reprinted, reproduced, transmitted, or utilized in any form by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying, microfilming, and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without written permission from the publishers. For permission to photocopy or use material electronically from this work, please access www. copyright.com (http://www.copyright.com/) or contact the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. (CCC), 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, MA 01923, 978-750-8400. CCC is a not-for-profit organization that provides licenses and registration for a variety of users. For organizations that have been granted a photocopy license by the CCC, a separate system of payment has been arranged. Trademark Notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. A Library of Congress record exists under LC control number: Publisher's Note The publisher has gone to great lengths to ensure the quality of this reprint but points out that some imperfections in the original copies may be apparent. Disclaimer The publisher has made every effort to trace copyright holders and welcomes correspondence from those they have been unable to contact. ISBN 13: 978-0-367-24329-6 (hbk) ISBN 13: 978-0-429-28179-2 (ebk) Visit the Taylor & Francis Web site at http://www.taylorandfrancis.com and the CRC Press Web site at http://www.crcpress.com PREFACE At the 1st International Workshop on Nude Mice held in Aarhus, Denmark in 1973, 36 papers were delivered, as judged from the proceedings published 1 year later. Of these, 92% were devoted to the breeding, biology, immunology, embryology, cytology, physi ology, pathology, and reconstitution of the mouse itself, so to speak, of the mouse personally. Only three papers dealt with the application of this model for in vivo culture of xenografts. At the 5th International Workshop held in Copenhagen, Denmark in 1985, 67 papers (and posters) dealing with nude mice were presented, as evident from the proceedings (Immune- Deficient Animals in Biomedical Research) published 2 years later. Of these, 21% were concerned with the nature (biology, immunology) of the mouse, 53 papers and posters addressed the use of the mouse as a living test tube. The shift in the proportion of contributions on basic questions about the nu mutation from 92 to 21% is representative also for the situation in biomedical laboratories and journals in general. It looks as if the nude mutation is sufficiently known to be justly applied as a standard and routine tool. It is not, of course; not only are there some physiological problems that have failed to trigger enough attention, but many of the basic immunological and endocrinological studies have been performed on poorly defined animal material and with hardly comparable methods. The purpose of this book is to survey at least some areas of solid knowledge and to show how many questions regarding the nude mouse itself remain unanswered. The scope of a single author must be, by definition, limited, but writing scientific mono graphs in this old-fashioned way has one advantage: there is less overlapping and less background noise than in a collection of chapters/articles by single specialists. I am much indebted to the people at CRC Press for coping with the manuscript written in a nonmaternal language and in conditions where technological progress has to be sup plemented by human effort and dedication. I am also deeply grateful to the Director and workers of the Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine in Prague. Miroslav Holub THE AUTHOR Miroslav Holub, M.D., Ph.D., is a senior scientific worker at the Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine in Prague, Czechoslovakia. He heads the experimental unit of the Institute's Immunological Department. Dr. Holub graduated and received the M.D. degree from the Charles IV. University, Prague, in 1953 and worked as a clinical pathologist. In 1954, he joined the newly formed immunological laboratory in the Biological (later Microbiological) Institute of the Czech oslovak Academy of Sciences and obtained the scientific degree, about equivalent to Ph.D. in 1958. He was engaged in the studies of cytological aspects of antibody formation and of the key role of the lymphocyte. During 1965 to 1967, he worked in the immunological laboratory of the Public Health Research Institute of New York City and in 1968 to 1969 at the Max Planck Institute for Immunobiology in Freiburg, W. Germany. He was introduced to the nude mouse club by the late Dr. Berenice Kindred, and has stayed on as a faithful member for all years thereafter, with the main interest focused on the nature of thymic dysgenesis. In 1972, he was transferred from the Academy to the Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine. He has published, so far, 130 scientific papers in immunology, one monograph (Structure of the Immune System, Prague 1979) and chapters in the Modern Trends in Immunology 2, London 1967 and in the Grundriss der Immunbiologie, Leipzig 1978 and 1988. During 1968 to 1970 Dr. Holub was a member of the presidium of the Union of Czech oslovak Scientific Workers. He is also a known writer translated in most European countries, the U.S., India, China, and Japan. In 1985, he obtained an honorary degree from Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio, and is a member of the Bavarian Academy of Arts. TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 1 Introduction: The Contradictory Mouse 1 Chapter 2 The Nude Mutation 5 Chapter 3 The Thymic Defect 13 I. Introduction 13 II. The Derivation of the Epithelial Stroma 13 III. Thymic Cysts and Brown Fat 16 IV. The Mesenchymal Component 18 V. The Essential Defect in the Nude Mouse Thymus 22 VI. The Lymphatic Rudiment and the Lymphoid Infiltraton in the Polycystic Organ 37 VII. The Thymus of the nul + Hybrid 42 VIII. Thymic Hormones 44 References 46 Chapter 4 T Cells 53 I. T-Cell Differentiation and Function 53 II. The Specificity Pattern of T Cells 56 III. Natural Killer and Cytotoxic Cells 59 References 62 Chapter 5 B Cells and Immunoglobulins 67 I. Introduction 67 II. B-Cell Turnover and Differentiation 67 III. Antibody Formation 70 IV. Tolerance 77 V. Polyclonal Activators and Background Immunoglobulins 79 References 82 Chapter 6 Stem Cells and Connective Tissues 89 I. Bone Marrow Stem Cell Potential and Leukocyte Numbers 89 II. Connective Tissues 92 III. Mast Cells 93 References 94 Chapter 7 Phagocytic System and Native Resistance 97 I. Phagocytic Cells in Ontogeny 97 II. Phagocytic Cells in Adult Nude Mice 100 References 107 Chapter 8 Lymphatic Tissues and Cellular Immune Reactions Ill I. Lymphatic Tissues Ill II. Cell-Mediated Immune Reactions 122 References 125 Chapter 9 Hairlessness and Metabolic Compensations 131 I. The Skin 131 II. Metabolic Rates and Deviations 135 References 137 Chapter 10 Neuronendocrine Regulations 141 I. Endocrine Organs and Functions 141 II. Thermogenesis and Neurotransmitters 146 III. Central Nervous System and Behavior 150 References 155 Chapter 11 Nude Gene Transfers and Remutation 159 Chapter 12 Conclusions 161 Index 163 1 Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION: THE CONTRADICTORY MOUSE In a Czech fairy tale a smart mountaineer woman is charged by a man of power to come to see him "neither in the day nor at night, neither naked nor dressed, neither on foot nor riding". The clever girl solves the problem by coming at dawn, with a loosely woven sack on her body, with one shoe and one sock on her feet, sitting on a goat with her legs on the ground. The athymic nude mouse reminds me of that viable mountain-girl-mutant; the mouse is not athymic, because it possesses at least one component of the normal mouse thymus; it is not nude, but it grows hair which is invisible most of the time. And lacking the key part of the immune defenses, it is not defenseless; on the contrary it may be better equipped to fight certain bacterial infections, at least in the early or acute phase, than a normal mouse. Lacking the key part of the "immune surveillance" system, it has no higher incidence of spontaneous tumors, at least not of solid epithelial tumors, and lives in a germ-free state or in perfect specific-pathogen-free (SPF) conditions for the same 1000 days as do normal mice of the given background, outliving even the immune surveillance theory in its original form. The nude mutant may have been here since 1962, or indeed since 1850, when two hairless mice died in a zoologist's grape vase and the third one escaped. Even since 1962 or 1968, the year the immunological career of the nude mutant started, when it occurred to one of the nude mice pioneers to check what the nude mouse had inside, the nude mouse may have changed considerably due to nu gene transfer to different background strains and for different levels of backcrossing, and as a result of progressively improving housing conditions, breeding and husbandry, with consequent elimination of some known or unknown natural pathogens. It cannot be claimed that an SPF BALB/c(10th backcross)fiw/ww mouse of 1987 is exactly the same as such a mouse from 1972. This is very good for the mouse which nowadays has litters from homozygous (nu/nu x nu/nu) matings in almost every breeding center — a rarity 15 years ago; but this is not good for the results or the comparability of immunological and physiological studies (Figure 1). In any case, the nude mouse has been a tool for an impressive amount of work on the nature of T cells and on the interaction of T cells with MHC class I and class II antigens (or rather molecular complexes with processed exogenous antigen). The T-cell studies were motivated by the "athymic state" of the model, but the "athymic state" itself was not enough of a motive for deeper embryological investigation or manipulation to pin down the reason for the athymic state, which is as obscure today as it was in 1968. Hence, one may read in the discussion in a paper on nude mice that "the presence of thymus cells in the nude mouse is undoubtedly related to the presence of a thymus during the first 12 days of gestation...". I wonder what would have happened to the poor nude mouse if it had first fallen into the hands of neurophysiologists — given its cortical and oligodendroglial deficits — or of endocrinologists — given its hypothalamic or even pineal body alterations and disturbed circadian rhythms — or of students of phagocytosis — given its impressive phagocytic capacities. Undoubtedly, thymic dysgenesis would have been discovered eventually, and it would have become the immunologically dominant trait, but the thinking would then not have been so thymus-monomanic. Not every single physiological alteration would have been attributed primarily to the athymia, which may, at best, affect the ontogeny from the 12th to 13th gestational day onwards, but also to something that may have gone wrong earlier, due to the nu gene. 2 Immunology of Nude Mice FIGURE 1. C57B1.10 LP female nude mouse, 3 months old, carrying her off spring from a homozygous litter (nu/nu x nul nú). As Hans Gruüneberg wrote in 1948:1 On the morphological level, gene-controlled disturbances provide a unique material for the study of epigenetic relationships... Work of this kind has as its background the postulate of the unity of primary gene action. From this postulate it follows logicaly that the various effects of a gene on the morphological level, however ill-assorted they may appear at first glance, are causually connected as an epigenetic pattern... That the progress made in the analysis of these phenomena is so far slight has two main reasons. One is that one cannot usually penetrate to this level without breaking down a solid morphological crust which hides the more fundamental processes from view. The other is the comparatively untractable chemistry of these big molecules... This monograph is based on the attempt not to ascribe too many phenomena within "the solid morphological crust' ' to athymia, but to try to penetrate back to the level o fthe possible 3 Table 1 PRINCIPAL PUBLICATIONS ON NUDE MICE Proc. 1st Int. Workshop on Nude Mice, Rygaard, J. and Povlsen, C. O., Eds., G. Fischer, Stuttgart, 1974. Proc. 2nd Int. Workshop on Nude Mice, Nomura, T., Ohsawa, N., Tamaoki, N., and Fujiwara, K., Eds., University of Tokyo Press, Tokyo, 1977 and G. Fischer, Stuttgart, 1977. Proc. 3rd Int. Workshop on Nude Mice, Reed, N. D., Ed., G. Fischer, New York, 1982. Immune-deficient Animals, Proc. 4th Int. Workshop on Immune Deficient Animals, Sordat, B., Ed., S. Karger, Basel, 1984. Immune-deficient Animals in Biomedical Research, Proc. 5thlnt. Workshop on Immune Deficient Animals, Rygaard, J., Brünner, N., Graem, N., and Spang-Thomsen, M., Eds., S. Karger, Basel, 1987. Rygaard, J., Thymus & Self, Immunobiology of the Mouse Mutant Nude, F. A. D L. Copenhagen, 1973. Bibliography of the Nude Mouse 1966—1976, Rygaard, J. and Povlsen, C. O. Eds., G. Fischer, Stuttgart, 1977. Proc. Symp. on the Use of Athymic (Nude) Mice in Cancer Research, Houchens, O. P. and Ovejera, A. A., Eds., G. Fischer, Stuttgart, 1978. The Nude Mouse in Experimental and Clinical Research, Vols. 1 and 2, Fogh, J. and Giovanella, B.C., Eds., Academic Press, New York, 1978, 1982. Immunodeficient Animals in Cancer Research, Sparrow, S., Ed., Macmillan, London, 1980. Thy musaplastic Nude Mice and Rats in Clinical Oncology, Bastert, G., Fortmeyer, H. P., and Schmidt-Matthiesen, H., Eds., G. Fischer, Stuttgart, 1981. Fortmeyer, H. P., Thymusaplastische Maus (nulnu) Thymusaplastische Ratte (rnu/rnu). Haltung, Zucht, Versuchs- modelle, Paul Parey, Berlin, 1981. Kindred, B., Nude mice in immunology, Prog. Allergy, 26, 137, 1979. Kindred, B., Deficient and sufficient immune systems in the nude mouse, in Immunologic Defects in Laboratory Animals, Vol. 1, Gerschwin, M. E. and Merchant, B. Eds., Plenum Press, New York, 1981, 215. ''primary gene action", at least by showing the multitude of alterations everywhere in the organism which has to survive the defect in one entire organ system2. The alterations may affect other alterations, compensations may affect the defects and may themselves be altered by other compensations. Some of the alterations may be parallel, not consequent upon the thymic dysgenesis. In other words, the nu gene effect may well be operating before the first thymic epithelial cells assemble to the anlage. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence of these ontogenic factors. However, in view of the available monographs, special attention and discussion will be focused on the thymus problem proper which is a neglected orphan in all nude mouse literature, albeit an orphan blamed or made responsible for all of the nude mice. This leaves little space for the favorite topics of nude mouse reconstitution, which were exhaustively surveyed by Kindred (Table 1) and no space to the applications of nude mice in experimental oncology, to which a special symposium and linearly increasing proportions of international workshops on nude mice and other immunodeficient animals (IWIDA) are devoted (Table 1). A perfect introduction to the problems of nude mouse breeding and production is provided by Fortmeyer's monograph and by specialized chapters in the book edited by Fogh and Giovanella and in separate IWIDA proceedings (Table 1). REFERENCES 1. Grüneberg, H., Genes and pathological development in mammals, in Growth in Relation to Differentiation and Morphogenesis, Symposia of the Society for Experimental Biology No. 2, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1948, 155. 2. Rygaard, J., Thymus & Self, Immunobiology of the Mouse Mutant Nude, F. A. D. L., Copenhagen, 1973.

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