Abstract

SNARE (soluble-N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment receptor) proteins mediate the recognition and fusion of transport vesicles in eukaryotic cells. The SNARE protein VAMP8 (also called endobrevin) is involved in the fusion of late endosomes and in some pathways of regulated exocytosis. In a subset of mice deficient for the SNARE protein VAMP8, a severe alteration of the thymus and in T lymphocyte development was observed and characterized. The size of the thymus and the number of thymocytes were dramatically reduced compared with those in heterozygous littermates. Further, the compartmentalization into cortex and medulla and the organization of the thymus epithelium were disturbed. The numbers of all thymocyte subpopulations were reduced, with the CD4 and CD8 double-positive thymocytes being most severely affected. The proportion of proliferating thymocytes was reduced, and the staining of apoptotic cells in situ and ex vivo indicated an increased number of apoptotic cells. Isolated thymocytes of Vamp8−/− mice were more susceptible to various apoptotic stimuli including glucocorticoids, FAS receptor, and CD3/CD28-mediated signaling in vitro, even before an increased number of apoptotic cells was detectable in situ. However, bone marrow of phenotypically affected Vamp8−/− mice was readily able to repopulate immunodeficient hosts suggesting that the SNARE protein VAMP8 has a specific function in the thymic stroma affecting the proliferation and apoptosis of T lymphocytes during maturation in the thymus.

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