| Literature DB >> 9314549 |
D Kägi1, B Odermatt, P Seiler, R M Zinkernagel, T W Mak, H Hengartner.
Abstract
To investigate the role of T cell-mediated, perforin-dependent cytotoxicity in autoimmune diabetes, perforin-deficient mice were backcrossed with the nonobese diabetes mouse strain. It was found that the incidence of spontaneous diabetes over a 1 yr period was reduced from 77% in perforin +/+ control to 16% in perforin-deficient mice. Also, the disease onset was markedly delayed (median onset of 39.5 versus 19 wk) in the latter. Insulitis with infiltration of CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells occurred similarly in both groups of animals. Lower incidence and delayed disease onset were also evident in perforin-deficient mice when diabetes was induced by cyclophosphamide injection. Thus, perforin-dependent cytotoxicity is a crucial effector mechanism for beta cell elimination by cytotoxic T cells in autoimmune diabetes. However, in the absence of perforin chronic inflammation of the islets can lead to diabetogenic beta cell loss by less efficient secondary effector mechanisms.Entities:
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Year: 1997 PMID: 9314549 PMCID: PMC2199062 DOI: 10.1084/jem.186.7.989
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Med ISSN: 0022-1007 Impact factor: 14.307
Figure 2Histological analysis of pancreatic islets. (A) Comparable degree of insulitis in pancreata of perforin-competent (+/0, top) and perforin-deficient (0/0, bottom) NOD mice. Pancreas sections from young (8-wk-old) and adult (55-wk-old) mice were stained with either hematoxylin and eosin (HE) or used for immunohistochemistry with CD4- or CD8-specific antibodies. Antibody binding resulted in red staining. (B) Presence of insulin-containing β cells in the islets of diabetic perforin-deficient mice. Sections from a 30-wk-old heterozygous and a 41-wk-old perforin-deficient diabetic NOD mouse were stained either with hematoxylin and eosin (HE) or with insulin-specific antibodies (red staining). Arrowheads in the left panel indicate reddish, eosinophilic dying islet cells. (C) Pancreatic islets of diabetic heterozygous and perforin-deficient NOD mice (both 7–10 wk old) after injection with cyclophosphamide. Diabetes occurred in the heterozygous mice 13 d after the first injection with 6 mg cyclophosphamide and in the perforin-deficient mouse 16 d after the second injection. Pancreas sections were either stained with hematoxylin and eosin (HE) or antiinsulin antibodies (red staining). Note the presence of insulin-containing β cells in the diabetic perforin-deficient NOD mouse and their lower intensity of insulin staining compared to islets from a healthy, untreated control C57BL/6 mouse.
Figure 1Development of insulitis and diabetes. (A) Semiquantitative assessment of insulitis in 9–12-wk-old normal control (+/+), heterozygous (+/0), or perforin-deficient (0/0) NOD mice. 20–40 randomly chosen islets/mouse were assessed on pancreas sections stained with hematoxylin and eosin. Insulitis was classified as either periinsulitis, moderate insulitis, or strong insulitis. Periinsulitis indicates a weak peripheral inflammatory infiltrate that does not penetrate the islet tissue, moderate insulitis indicates an infiltrate <50% of the islet area, and strong insulitis indicates an infiltrate >50% of the islet area. The results are given as percentage of islets per total islets scored for each mouse. Sections from three perforin +/+, six perforin +/0, and six perforin 0/0 mice were assessed. (B) Delayed onset and reduced incidence of spontaneous diabetes in perforin-deficient mice. Normal control (+/+, n = 13), heterozygous (+/0, n = 27), and perforin-deficient (0/0, n = 25) female NOD mice (seventh generation backcross, littermates) were observed over a period of 55 wk. Animals were considered diabetic if two successive blood glucose measurements at least 1 d apart yielded values >17 mM. (C) Analysis of spontaneous diabetes in perforin-deficient mice. Insulin dependence in perforin-expressing and perforin-deficient diabetes mice. Newly diagnosed diabetic mice were injected with 1 IU of human recombinant insulin s.c. into the flank and blood glucose levels were monitored subsequently. Normal NOD and heterozygous mice were 25 and 33 wk old, respectively, whereas diabetic perforin-deficient mice were both 41 wk old. Blood glucose levels from individual mice are shown. The experiment was repeated twice with similar results.
Figure 3Induction of diabetes by injection of cyclophosphamide. (A) Incidence of diabetes after i.p. injection of 6 mg of cyclophosphamide on days 0 and 14 into 8–12-wk-old normal control (n = 5), heterozygous (n = 16), and perforin-deficient (n = 13) mice. The experiment was repeated twice with similar results. (B) Blood glucose values in four representative heterozygous or perforin-deficient mice from the experiment shown in A.