Faculty Research 1990 - 1999
Islet-infiltrating lymphocytes from prediabetic NOD mice rapidly transfer diabetes to NOD-scid/scid mice.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1995
Keywords
CD4-Positive-T-Lymphocytes: im, Diabetes-Mellitus-Experimental: et, im, Diabetes-Mellitus-Insulin-Dependent: et, im, Disease-Models-Animal, Female, Immunotherapy-Adoptive, Islets-of-Langerhans: im, Lymphocytes: im, Male, Mice, Mice-Inbred-NOD, Mice-SCID, Prediabetic-State: im, Spleen: im, SUPPORT-NON-U-S-GOVT, SUPPORT-U-S-GOVT-P-H-S
First Page
550
Last Page
554
JAX Source
Diabetes 1995 May;44(5):550-4
Grant
DK39959/DK/NIDDK, DK44837/DK/NIDDK, AI30389/AI/NIAID
Abstract
In an effort to study the development of diabetes in NOD mice, our laboratory developed a novel adoptive transfer model using NOD-scid/scid (NOD-scid) mice as recipients of islet-infiltrating lymphocytes from donor prediabetic female NOD mice. We first confirmed previous results that demonstrated that splenocytes of diabetic and prediabetic female NOD mice could transfer diabetes to NOD-scid mice. We demonstrated that the kinetics of disease transfer were dependent on the age of transferred lymphocytes and reiterated the kinetics of diabetes in conventional female NOD mice. We then demonstrated that islet-infiltrating lymphocytes from prediabetic female NOD mice could transfer diabetes. In contrast with the age-dependent transfer of diabetes seen using splenocytes, islet-infiltrating lymphocytes obtained from prediabetic female NOD mice aged > or = 40 days rapidly transferred diabetes to NOD-scid recipients. The time required to transfer insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) using islet-infiltrating lymphocytes from young prediabetic mice (25 +/- 9 days) was not statistically different from the time required to transfer IDDM using splenocytes from overtly diabetic mice (32 +/- 5 days). Cotransfer of splenocyte cells or CD4+, but not CD8+ spleen cells, from 60- to 80-day-old prediabetic female NOD mice together with either splenocytes from diabetic mice or islet-infiltrating lymphocytes from prediabetic NOD mice delayed the rapid transfer of IDDM, suggesting that CD4+ cells mediated immunoregulation. Use of the NOD-scid islet-infiltrating lymphocyte-adoptive transfer model should help elucidate the pathophysiology of the early inflammatory events leading to insulitis and subsequent beta-cell destruction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Recommended Citation
Rohane PW,
Shimada A,
Kim DT,
Edwards CT,
Charlton B,
Shultz LD,
Fathman CG.
Islet-infiltrating lymphocytes from prediabetic NOD mice rapidly transfer diabetes to NOD-scid/scid mice. Diabetes 1995 May;44(5):550-4