Literature DB >> 9075794

Immunological aspects of nutritional diabetes prevention in NOD mice: a pilot study for the cow's milk-based IDDM prevention trial.

W Karges1, D Hammond-McKibben, R K Cheung, M Visconti, N Shibuya, D Kemp, H M Dosch.   

Abstract

Human epidemiological studies delineated early exposure to intact dietary protein (e.g., most infant formulas) as an environmental risk factor for the development of IDDM. The Trial to Reduce IDDM in the Genetically at Risk (TRIGR), an international IDDM prevention trial, has been designed to determine if avoidance of intact dairy protein in high-risk infants < or =6 months of age can reduce the subsequent diabetes incidence. We here studied the casein hydrolysate-based trial diet (Nutramigen) in NOD mice. When given either continuously or for 10 weeks after weaning, the test diet was highly effective in preventing autoimmune diabetes (32-week incidence: 4.6 vs. 58.8%) and in preserving pancreatic insulin levels, with little effect on islet inflammation. Spleen cells from protected NOD mice failed to adoptively transfer diabetes into irradiated syngeneic recipients. When co-transferred with splenocytes from diabetic donors, cells from diet-protected mice inhibited adoptive diabetes transfer (incidence 50 vs. 94%, P < 0.001). T-cell reactivity to the islet cell autoantigens ICA69 (islet cell antigen 69) and GAD65 developed only in diabetic recipients of spleen cell grafts, indicating that diabetes protection extends to more than one autoantigen. In protected mice, ICA69 T-cell reactivity was not detectable spontaneously nor after priming with this autoantigen; however, priming with the cross-reactive non-self-antigen bovine serum albumin recruited T-cells responsive to ICA69. Thus, diabetes prevention with the clinical trial diet is effective in NOD mice, where it affects some T-cell repertoires and allows development of regulatory cells that interfere with destructive autoimmunity.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9075794     DOI: 10.2337/diab.46.4.557

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diabetes        ISSN: 0012-1797            Impact factor:   9.461


  19 in total

Review 1.  Immunotherapy of immune-mediated diabetes. Present and future.

Authors:  N Maclaren
Journal:  Clin Rev Allergy Immunol       Date:  2000-12       Impact factor: 8.667

Review 2.  Beta-casein in cow's milk: a major antigenic determinant for type 1 diabetes?

Authors:  P Pozzilli
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  1999 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 4.256

Review 3.  Controversial topics series: milk proteins and diabetes.

Authors:  J M Norris; M Pietropaolo
Journal:  J Endocrinol Invest       Date:  1999 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 4.256

4.  Environmental factors and primary prevention in type 1 diabetes.

Authors:  Jorma Ilonen; Outi Vaarala; Hans K Akerblom; Mikael Knip
Journal:  Pediatr Endocrinol Diabetes Metab       Date:  2009

Review 5.  T-cell autoantigens in the non-obese diabetic mouse model of autoimmune diabetes.

Authors:  Jeffrey Babad; Ari Geliebter; Teresa P DiLorenzo
Journal:  Immunology       Date:  2010-10-13       Impact factor: 7.397

6.  An update on the use of NOD mice to study autoimmune (Type 1) diabetes.

Authors:  Rodolfo José Chaparro; Teresa P Dilorenzo
Journal:  Expert Rev Clin Immunol       Date:  2010-11       Impact factor: 4.473

Review 7.  New and future immunomodulatory therapy in type 1 diabetes.

Authors:  James E Tooley; Frank Waldron-Lynch; Kevan C Herold
Journal:  Trends Mol Med       Date:  2012-02-17       Impact factor: 11.951

8.  Dietary manipulation of beta cell autoimmunity in infants at increased risk of type 1 diabetes: a pilot study.

Authors:  H K Akerblom; S M Virtanen; J Ilonen; E Savilahti; O Vaarala; A Reunanen; K Teramo; A-M Hämäläinen; J Paronen; M-A Riikjärv; A Ormisson; J Ludvigsson; H-M Dosch; T Hakulinen; M Knip
Journal:  Diabetologia       Date:  2005-04-19       Impact factor: 10.122

Review 9.  Early feeding and risk of type 1 diabetes: experiences from the Trial to Reduce Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in the Genetically at Risk (TRIGR).

Authors:  Mikael Knip; Suvi M Virtanen; Dorothy Becker; John Dupré; Jeffrey P Krischer; Hans K Åkerblom
Journal:  Am J Clin Nutr       Date:  2011-06-08       Impact factor: 7.045

10.  The ethics of type 1 diabetes prediction and prevention research.

Authors:  Lainie Friedman Ross
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2003
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