Vitamin A and its active derivatives (referred to as retinoids) play critical roles in a variety of biological processes and functions. Retinoids are ligands that bind and activate retinoic acid receptors (RAR) and retinoid X receptors (RXR) each consisting of three isotypes (α, β and γ) and these, in turn, function as transcription factors that regulate the expression of target genes(Reference Alvarez, Germain and Alvarez1, Reference Chambon2). Vitamin A plays an important role in maintaining dendritic cells (DC). Loss of retinoic acid (RA) signalling prevents myeloid DC development in vitro (Reference Hengesbach and Hoak3). It has previously been described that spleens resected from Vitamin A-deficient mice show alterations in DC subsets(Reference Duriancik and Hoak4). Macrophage population in the spleen also decreases in transgenic mice expressing RARβ antisense sequences(Reference Chen, Bérard and Luo5). The production of conditional RARβ-deficient mice generated by floxing RARβ gene in mice expressing Cre recombinase (RARβL−/L−), represents a useful model to analyse the role of this receptor(Reference Chapellier, Mark and Bastien6). This work examined the role of RARβ on DC in spleen. DNA from ear and spleen of RARβL−/L− conditional mutant mice was used to identify the recombined RARβ alleles and C57BL/6 mice were used as control (data not shown)(Reference Chapellier, Mark and Bastien6). Sections of paraffin-embedded spleens were used for immunohistochemistry and histopathological analyses. Leucocytes obtained from spleens were used for Western blotting and flow cytometry analyses. In addition, total RNA was isolated from spleen and used for cDNA synthesis and quantitative real-time PCR (n 3).
Our results showed that RARβ is expressed mainly in the splenic white pulp zone of wild-type mice (data not shown). Low levels of RARβ expression were detected in the spleen of RARβL−/L− mice, as determined by immunohistochemistry (Fig. 1A) and Western-blot analysis (Fig. 1B). These results are consistent with a decrease in the population of splenic CD11c+MHC-II+ white cells (Fig. 2) and decrease in TLR2 expression (Fig. 3). Histopathology analyses of conditional mice spleen showed a reduction of macrophage-like cells and loss in cell organisation and structure (data not shown). Our results suggest that RARβ is involved in spleen cell organisation and the homeostatic maintenance of DC (Figs 1–3).
This work was supported by Conacyt and Tecnológico de Estudios Superiores de Huixquilucan.