International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Dec 2018)

Mast Cell-Specific Expression of Human Siglec-8 in Conditional Knock-in Mice

  • Yadong Wei,
  • Krishan D. Chhiba,
  • Fengrui Zhang,
  • Xujun Ye,
  • Lihui Wang,
  • Li Zhang,
  • Piper A. Robida,
  • Liliana Moreno-Vinasco,
  • Ronald L. Schnaar,
  • Axel Roers,
  • Karin Hartmann,
  • Chang-Min Lee,
  • Delia Demers,
  • Tao Zheng,
  • Bruce S. Bochner,
  • Zhou Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms20010019
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
p. 19

Abstract

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Sialic acid-binding Ig-like lectin 8 (Siglec-8) is expressed on the surface of human eosinophils, mast cells, and basophils—cells that participate in allergic and other diseases. Ligation of Siglec-8 by specific glycan ligands or antibodies triggers eosinophil death and inhibits mast cell degranulation; consequences that could be leveraged as treatment. However, Siglec-8 is not expressed in murine and most other species, thus limiting preclinical studies in vivo. Based on a ROSA26 knock-in vector, a construct was generated that contains the CAG promoter, a LoxP-floxed-Neo-STOP fragment, and full-length Siglec-8 cDNA. Through homologous recombination, this Siglec-8 construct was targeted into the mouse genome of C57BL/6 embryonic stem (ES) cells, and chimeric mice carrying the ROSA26-Siglec-8 gene were generated. After cross-breeding to mast cell-selective Cre-recombinase transgenic lines (CPA3-Cre, and Mcpt5-Cre), the expression of Siglec-8 in different cell types was determined by RT-PCR and flow cytometry. Peritoneal mast cells (dual FcεRI+ and c-Kit+) showed the strongest levels of surface Siglec-8 expression by multicolor flow cytometry compared to expression levels on tissue-derived mast cells. Siglec-8 was seen on a small percentage of peritoneal basophils, but not other leukocytes from CPA3-Siglec-8 mice. Siglec-8 mRNA and surface protein were also detected on bone marrow-derived mast cells. Transgenic expression of Siglec-8 in mice did not affect endogenous numbers of mast cells when quantified from multiple tissues. Thus, we generated two novel mouse strains, in which human Siglec-8 is selectively expressed on mast cells. These mice may enable the study of Siglec-8 biology in mast cells and its therapeutic targeting in vivo.

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