The present invention provides a animal model useful in identifying a
molecule controlling in a lymphocyte-specific manner migration and thus
elucidating immune-related diseases and pathogenic conditions such as
allergy, autoimmune diseases, GvH and graft rejections at a molecular
level, or in developing a novel therapy. A nonhuman animal model such as
a DOCK2 knockout mouse, in which the function to control lymphocyte
migration has been deleted or suppressed, is generated by deleting DOCK2
gene on the chromosome. In this DOCK2 knockout mouse, the function of
activating Rac to mediate actin cyteskeleton, the lymphocyte migration
function in response to stimuli with chemokines such as SLC, SDF-1, BLC,
the homing function to secondary lymphoid organs such as spleen, lymph
nodes and Peyer's patches, and the function of emigrating mature thymic T
cells into peripheral blood in response to stimulus with chemokine ELC
are impaired, and as a result of this, immune responses are suppressed.