Granzyme B and the downstream granzymes C and/or F are important for cytotoxic lymphocyte functions.

2005
https://researcherprofiles.org/profile/1440515
15699143
Revell PA, Grossman WJ, Thomas DA, Cao X, Behl R, Ratner JA, Lu ZH, Ley TJ
Abstract

Although the functions of granzyme A (GzmA) and GzmB are well-defined, a number of orphan granzymes of unknown function are also expressed in cytotoxic lymphocytes. Previously, we showed that a targeted loss-of-function mutation for GzmB was associated with reduced expression of several downstream orphan granzyme genes in the lymphokine-activated killer cell compartment. To determine whether this was caused by the retained phosphoglycerate kinase I gene promoter (PGK-neo) cassette in the GzmB gene, we retargeted the GzmB gene with a LoxP-flanked PGK-neo cassette, then removed the cassette in embryonic stem cells by transiently expressing Cre recombinase. Mice homozygous for the GzmB null mutation containing the PGK-neo cassette (GzmB-/-/+PGK-neo) displayed reduced expression of the closely linked GzmC and F genes in their MLR-derived CTLs and lymphokine-activated killer cells; removal of the PGK-neo cassette (GzmB-/-/DeltaPGK-neo) restored the expression of both genes. Cytotoxic lymphocytes derived from mice with the retained PGK-neo cassette (GzmB-/-/+PGK-neo) had a more severe cytotoxic defect than those deficient for GzmB only (GzmB-/-/DeltaPGK-neo). Similarly, GzmB-/-/+PGK-neo mice displayed a defect in the allogeneic clearance of P815 tumor cells, whereas GzmB-/-/DeltaPGK-neo mice did not. These results suggest that the retained PGK-neo cassette in the GzmB gene causes a knockdown of GzmC and F expression, and also suggest that these granzymes are relevant for the function of cytotoxic lymphocytes in vitro and in vivo.

Journal Issue
Volume 174 of Issue 4