Abstract
The transgenic murine Cre/loxP system is deployed to investigate the role of central nervous system (CNS) cell-specific gene alterations in both healthy conditions and models of neurologic disease. The Aldh1l1-Cre/ERT2 line is widely used to target astrocytes with high coverage and specificity within the CNS. Specificity outside the CNS, however, has not been well-characterized, and Aldh1l1-Cre/ERT2-mediated recombination within the spleen has been reported. In many CNS diseases, infiltrating immune cells from the periphery drive or regulate pathogenesis. We tested whether flox-mediated recombination from Aldh1l1-Cre/ERT2 occurs in immune cells in addition to astrocytes and whether these cells traffic from the spleen into the spinal cord during experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), a model of CNS autoimmune disease. Two astrocyte-targeted mouse lines were generated with the red fluorescent reporter, tdTomato, by crossing the Cre-recombinase lines, Tg(Aldh1l1-Cre/ERT2)1Khakh and Tg(Gfap-Cre)73.12Mvs, with the reporter line, Gt(ROSA)26Sor. Aldh1l1-Cre/ERT2 was activated with 5 days of intraperitoneal tamoxifen, whereas Gfap-Cre was constitutively active. EAE was induced 2 weeks after tamoxifen, and then spleens and spinal cords were harvested and processed for flow cytometry at various time points after disease onset in EAE versus healthy controls. In EAE, Aldh1l1-Cre/ERT2, but not Gfap-Cre, induced multiple tdTomato+ immune cell subpopulations in the spleen and spinal cord, including macrophages, monocytes, neutrophils, eosinophils, B cells, CD4+, and CD8+ T cells. Use of Aldh1l1-Cre/ERT2 should therefore account for recombination in both astrocytes and immune cells in disease models involving peripheral immune cell infiltration into the CNS.
Published Version
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