The NSG mouse (NOD scid gamma mouse) is a brand of immunodeficient laboratory mice, developed and marketed by Jackson Laboratory, which carries the strain NOD.Cg-Prkdc<sup>scid</sup> Il2rg<sup>tm1Wjl</sup>/SzJ. NSG branded mice are among the most immunodeficient described to date. NSG branded mice lack mature T cells, B cells, and natural killer (NK) cells. NSG branded mice are also deficient in multiple cytokine signaling pathways, and they have many defects in innate immunity. The compound immunodeficiencies in NSG branded mice permit the engraftment of a wide range of primary human cells, and enable sophisticated modeling of many areas of human biology and disease. NSG branded mice were developed in the laboratory of Dr. Leonard Shultz at Jackson Laboratory, which owns the NSG trade mark.
Features of NSG mice
- The genetic background, derived from inbred NOD mouse strain NOD/ShiLtJ, contributes reductions in innate immunity that include an absent hemolytic complement system, reduced dendritic cell function, and defective macrophage activity. The NOD/ShiLtJ background also contributes an allele of the Sirpa gene that renders the bone marrow niche very permissive to colonization by human hematopoietic stem cells.
- The Prkdc<sup>scid</sup> mutation, commonly known as "scid" or "severe combined immunodeficiency", essentially eliminates adaptive immunity. Prkdc<sup>scid</sup> is a loss-of-function mutation in the mouse homologue of the human PRKDC gene, which encodes a protein that resolves DNA strand breaks that occur during V(D)J recombination in developing T and B lymphocytes. Mice homozygous for the mutation have severely reduced numbers of mature T and B cells. The phenotypic penetrance of Prkdc<sup>scid</sup> varies among inbred strain backgrounds, but the mutation is most effective at eliminating adaptive immunity on the NOD genetic background. Due to the Prkdc<sup>scid</sup> mutation, however, the NSG strain shows high sensitivity to radiation, T-cell leakage, and increased incidence of thymic lymphoma formation; as such, this strain cannot be used to predict clinical response to certain anticancer drugs, or for long-term transplantation studies.
- The Il2rg<sup>tm1Wjl</sup> targeted mutation is a complete null mutation in the gene encoding the interleukin 2 receptor gamma chain (IL2Ró, homologous to IL2RG in humans). IL2Ró is a common component of the cell surface receptors that bind and transduce signals from six distinct interleukins. Signaling through IL2Ró is required for the differentiation and function of many hematopoietic cells. Notably, the absence of IL2Ró blocks NK cell differentiation, and thereby removes a major obstacle preventing the efficient engraftment of primary human cells.
Research applications
References
Notes
1.Mouse Genome Informatics entry for Prkdc<sup>scid</sup>
2.Mouse Genome Informatics entry for Il2rg<sup>tm1Wjl</sup>
External links