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Foxp3-Cre for regulatory T cell conditional models

Tissue restricted knockout of Target reduces off target stress compared with constitutive loss. You retain wild type Target everywhere else, which improves breeding robustness and mirrors patient biology where mutations arise in a subset of cells. For regulatory T cell work, plan Cre specificity, reporter crosses, and baseline phenotyping before you scale.

View all regulatory T cell Cre lines

Driver pairing notes

Foxp3-Cre biases recombination toward regulatory T cell lineages. Inducible design: no, constitutive activity.

Conditional knockout keeps treg as the experimental theater while the rest of the animal retains a wild type allele. That pattern mirrors somatic mutation in patients and avoids systemic compensation that can erase subtle phenotypes. It is often preferred when a germline null is lethal, weak, or confounded by developmental rescue.

A conventional knockout answers whether the gene is required broadly. When treg is the organ of interest, a global null can still be informative if viability is acceptable and you want the simplest genotype. If the null is harsh, a floxed allele with a regional Cre is the safer long term platform.

Example conditional alleles to pair with Foxp3-Cre

H2 with Foxp3-CreStk11 with Foxp3-CreCdkn2a with Foxp3-CreFbn1 with Foxp3-CreHbb with Foxp3-Cre

Frequently asked questions

What animals express Foxp3-Cre?

Foxp3-Cre is used for regulatory T cell biased recombination in community standard protocols. We recommend reporter validation on your background before large experiments.

Is Foxp3-Cre inducible?

Some lines in the CreERT2 family need tamoxifen for nuclear access. Tell us your timing goals and we help pick tamoxifen versus constitutive strategies.

Which floxed genes pair with Foxp3-Cre?

Top pairs depend on your disease model. We link common conditional alleles in our catalog and can suggest three to five references genes that match regulatory T cell biology.

References

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