Abstract

Class I membrane glycoproteins encoded by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes are not expressed during early stages of development. This regulation is thought to play an important role in maternal tolerance of the fetal allograft. To elucidate the significance of developmental regulation of MHC class I genes, we produced transgenic mice expressing transgenes encoding the class I Ld heavy chain or the light chain, β2-microglobulin, in the developing mouse embryo. These transgenes were driven by the chiken β-actin promoter, which is very active in the developing mouse embryo. The heavy chain and light chain transgenic mice were mated, and the resultant double transgenic offspring expressed Ld antigen in all the tissues examined by immunostaining and Northern blot analysis. The Ld antigen was also detected by immunostaining in the placenta of the double transgenic fetus. The double transgenic fetus was not rejected by the immunocompetent nontransgenic mother. These results suggest that expression of MHC class I antigens in embryos is not sufficient to provoke a maternal immune response.

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