Literature DB >> 9392483

Retardation or acceleration of diabetes in NOD/Lt mice mediated by intrathymic administration of candidate beta-cell antigens.

M Cetkovic-Cvrlje1, I C Gerling, A Muir, M A Atkinson, J F Elliott, E H Leiter.   

Abstract

A single injection of syngeneic islet cells into the thymus of 4-week-old NOD/Lt female mice strongly retards diabetogenesis. The present study used the intrathymic route of antigen administration to compare the relative efficacy of peptides/proteins derived from two major candidate pancreatic beta-cell autoantigens, insulin and GAD65, to modulate diabetogenesis. Intrathymic administration of insulin B chain or recombinant human GAD65 significantly suppressed diabetogenesis during a 20-week follow-up period, whereas no protection was mediated by either insulin A chain or a synthetic peptide (A2) derived from it. Quite unexpectedly, two GAD65-derived peptides near the COOH-terminus (p34 and p35) accelerated diabetes onset. Semiquantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis was performed on cDNAs from isolated islets or whole pancreases of NOD/Lt females 4 weeks after intrathymic injections. Protection mediated by intrathymic administration with either intact islet cells or GAD65 were correlated with an upregulation of mRNA for T-helper 2 (Th2)-associated cytokines (interleukin [IL]-4, IL-10), concomitant with downregulation of Th1-associated interferon (IFN) transcripts (all normalized to T-cell receptor Cbeta transcripts) in islet-infiltrating lymphocytes. Protection mediated by the intrathymic administration of insulin B chain, however, correlated only with a modest upregulation of IL-4 and IL-10 transcript levels, and no diminution in IFN-gamma transcripts. In contrast, the diabetes-accelerating GAD65 p34 and p35 peptides were not associated with an immune deviation, expressing levels of IFN-gamma characteristic of islet-infiltrating lymphocytes in vehicle-injected NOD controls. Hence, Th1-to-Th2 immune deviation provides only a partial explanation for peptide immunotherapy of diabetes in NOD mice. The finding that certain peptides can accelerate rather than retard diabetogenesis as a function of route and age of administration adds a cautionary note to this type of therapy.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9392483     DOI: 10.2337/diab.46.12.1975

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


  22 in total

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7.  Ins2 deficiency augments spontaneous HLA-A*0201-restricted T cell responses to insulin.

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8.  Widespread expression of an autoantigen-GAD65 transgene does not tolerize non-obese diabetic mice and can exacerbate disease.

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10.  Transgenically induced GAD tolerance curtails the development of early beta-cell autoreactivities but causes the subsequent development of supernormal autoreactivities to other beta-cell antigens.

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Journal:  Diabetes       Date:  2009-09-09       Impact factor: 9.461

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