Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In vivo treatment of mice with the natural killer T (NKT) cell ligand, alpha-galactosylceramide (alphaGalCer), ameliorates autoimmune diabetes and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) by shifting pathogenic Th1-type immune responses to nonpathogenic Th2-type responses. In the current study, in vivo activation of NKT cells in adult NZB/W mice by multiple injections of alphaGalCer induced an abnormal Th1-type immune response as compared with the Th2-type response observed in nonautoimmune C57BL/6 mice. This resulted in decreased serum levels of IgE, increased levels of IgG2a and IgG2a anti-double-stranded DNA (anti-dsDNA) Ab's, and exacerbated lupus. Conversely, treatment of NZB/W mice with blocking anti-CD1d mAb augmented Th2-type responses, increased serum levels of IgE, decreased levels of IgG2a and IgG2a anti-dsDNA Ab's, and ameliorated lupus. While total CD4+ T cells markedly augmented in vitro IgM anti-dsDNA Ab secretion by splenic B cells, the non-CD1d-reactive (CD1d-alphaGalCer tetramer-negative) CD4+ T cells (accounting for 95% of all CD4+ T cells) failed to augment Ab secretion. The CD1d-reactive tetramer-positive CD4+ T cells augmented anti-dsDNA Ab secretion about tenfold. In conclusion, activation of NKT cells augments Th1-type immune responses and autoantibody secretion that contribute to lupus development in adult NZB/W mice, and anti-CD1d mAb might be useful for treating lupus.
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PMID:Activation of natural killer T cells in NZB/W mice induces Th1-type immune responses exacerbating lupus. 1456 6

Various therapeutic strategies have been developed to tolerize autoreactive T cells and prevent autoimmune pathology in type 1 diabetes. 4-1BB, a member of the tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR) superfamily, is a costimulatory receptor primarily expressed on activated T cells. The administration of an agonistic anti-4-1BB antibody (2A) dramatically reduced the incidence and severity of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). Treatment with the same antibody in Fas-deficient MRL/lpr mice blocked lymphadenopathy and lupus-like autoimmune processes. Paradoxically, transgenic non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice overexpressing membrane-bound agonistic single-chain anti-4-1BB Fv in pancreatic beta cells developed more severe diabetes than their non-transgenic littermates, with earlier onset, faster diabetic processes, and higher mortality. Forty percent of transgenic mice developed diabetes by 4 weeks of age, compared with their control littermates, which first exhibited diabetes at 14 weeks. The frequency of diabetes in female transgenics reached 70% by 8 weeks of age. Most female transgenic mice died around 12 weeks. Consistent with this, transgenic mice developed earlier and more severe insulitis and showed stronger GAD-specific T-cell responses, compared with age-matched control littermates. Our results indicate an adverse effect of transgenic anti-4-1BB scFv in NOD mice and suggest a potential risk of this anti-4-1BB-based immunotherapy for autoimmune diseases.
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PMID:Anti-4-1BB-based immunotherapy for autoimmune diabetes: lessons from a transgenic non-obese diabetic (NOD) model. 1459 49

Self-reactivity is potentially so devastating to the organism that a variety of regulatory devices have evolved to control it. One broadly used strategy is that employing the processed T cell receptor (TCR) as a target for TCR-specific regulatory cells. In several autoimmune models, feedback regulation employing both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells of TCR specificity can be shown to occur and to account for remission from the transient disease state, or for its prevention. We will focus here on the experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) model in the B10.PL (H-2u) mouse. In this model, the acetylated 1-9 N-terminal antigenic determinant from myelin basic protein (MBP) induces a transient paralytic disease owing to the activation of self-directed, high-affinity, CD4+ T cells. Although the response is multiclonal, a particularly aggressive member of this repertoire, bearing a Vbeta8.2,Jbeta2.7 receptor, which we have termed a 'driver clone', appears to be largely responsible for the disease process. A CD4+ T cell directed against a TCR determinant in the framework region of the Vbeta chain, and a CD8+ T cell directed against an upstream, distinct framework determinant, both of which are necessary for regulation, bring about a reversal of the disease process. To accomplish this, there must be a Th1 milieu during the induction of regulation, which is provided in part by the CD4+ regulatory cells themselves. To act as a target, the Vbeta8.2 MBP-reactive T cell must be activated, and the Th1 driver clone(s) is down-regulated via apoptotic killing, leaving a group of Th2, MBP-specific clones of weak affinity, which themselves may help in perpetuating long-term regulation. Similar results are also found in the collagen arthritis and NOD diabetes models.
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PMID:Seven surprises in the TCR-centred regulation of immune responsiveness in an autoimmune system. 1460 18

Natural killer T (NKT) cells are a unique lymphocyte subtype implicated in the regulation of autoimmunity, particularly diabetes and experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in animal models. In some reports, NKT-cell regulation was revealed only following vigorous activation by a synthetic glycolipid, a process that might not occur naturally. Patients with diverse autoimmune diseases have reduced NKT-cell counts and, in diabetes and multiple sclerosis, effective NKT-cell regulation correlates with the secretion of Th2 cytokines. Although current controversy surrounds the importance of NKT cells and their modes of action, they represent a potentially important clinical target.
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PMID:Natural killer T cells: natural or unnatural regulators of autoimmunity? 1463 Feb 3

The skin is both an essential barrier for host defense and an important organ of immunity. In this study, we show that the application of cholera toxin to intact mouse skin induces and enhances autoimmune diseases affecting organs at distant anatomic sites, whereas its administration by the mucosal route has been reported to have the opposite effect. First, the CNS autoantigen myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein 35-55, when applied repeatedly with cholera toxin to the intact skin of healthy C57BL/6 mice, induced relapsing paralysis with demyelinating immunopathologic features similar to multiple sclerosis. Second, the application of cholera toxin in the absence of autoantigen exacerbated the severity of conventional experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis induced by myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein in CFA. Third, the application of cholera toxin to the intact skin of NOD/Lt mice, with or without insulin B peptide 9-23, exacerbated insulitis and T lymphocyte-derived IFN-gamma and IL-4 production in the islets of Langerhans, resulting in an increased incidence and rate of onset of autoimmune diabetes. The data presented in this study highlight the different outcomes of adjuvant administration by different routes. Because dermal application of cholera toxin, and other bacterial products with similar adjuvant activities, is being developed as a clinical vaccination strategy, these data raise the possibility that it could precipitate autoimmune disease in genetically susceptible humans.
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PMID:Dermal enhancement: bacterial products on intact skin induce and augment organ-specific autoimmune disease. 1468 38

Immunization with heat-shock protein (HSP) gp96 elicits protective immunity to the cancer or virus-infected cells from which it is derived. Low doses of gp96 generate immunity, while doses 10 times the immunizing dose do not. We show here that injection of high doses of gp96 generates CD4(+) T cells that down-regulate a variety of ongoing immune responses. Immunization with high doses of gp96 prevents myelin basic protein- or proteolipid protein-induced autoimmune encephalomyelitis in SJL mice and the onset of diabetes in non-obese diabetic mice. The suppression of immune response can be adoptively transferred with CD4(+) cells and does not partition with the CD25 phenotype. The immunomodulatory properties of gp96 (and possibly other HSP) may be used for antigen-specific activation or suppression of cellular immune responses. The latter may form the basis for novel immunotherapies for autoimmune diseases.
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PMID:Immune modulation with high-dose heat-shock protein gp96: therapy of murine autoimmune diabetes and encephalomyelitis. 1503 92

We aligned Incyte ESTs and publicly available sequences to the rat genome and analyzed rat chromosome 1q43-54, a region in which several quantitative trait loci (QTLs) have been identified, including renal disease, diabetes, hypertension, body weight, and encephalomyelitis. Within this region, which contains 255 Ensembl gene predictions, the aligned sequences clustered into 568 Incyte genes and gene fragments. Of the Incyte genes, 261 (46%) overlapped 184 (72%) of the Ensembl gene predictions, whereas 307 were unique to Incyte. The rat-to-human syntenic map displays rearrangement of this region on rat chr. 1 onto human chromosomes 9 and 10. The mapping of corresponding human disease phenotypes to either one of these chromosomes has allowed us to focus in on genes associated with disease phenotypes. As an example, we have used the syntenic information for the rat Rf-1 disease region and the orthologous human ESRD disease region to reduce the size of the original rat QTL to only 11.5 Mb. Using the syntenic information in combination with expression data from ESTs and microarrays, we have selected a set of 66 candidate disease genes for Rf-1. The combination of the results from these different analyses represents a powerful approach for narrowing the number of genes that could play a role in the development of complex diseases.
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PMID:Identification of candidate disease genes by EST alignments, synteny, and expression and verification of Ensembl genes on rat chromosome 1q43-54. 1506 5

Linkage analysis and congenic mapping in NOD mice have identified a susceptibility locus for type 1 diabetes, Idd5.1 on mouse chromosome 1, which includes the Ctla4 and Icos genes. Besides type 1 diabetes, numerous autoimmune diseases have been mapped to a syntenic region on human chromosome 2q33. In this study we determined how the costimulatory molecules encoded by these genes contribute to the immunopathogenesis of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). When we compared levels of expression of costimulatory molecules on T cells, we found higher ICOS and lower full-length CTLA-4 expression on activated NOD T cells compared with C57BL/6 (B6) and C57BL/10 (B10) T cells. Using NOD.B10 Idd5 congenic strains, we determined that a 2.1-Mb region controls the observed expression differences of ICOS. Although Idd5.1 congenic mice are resistant to diabetes, we found them more susceptible to myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein 35-55-induced EAE compared with NOD mice. Our data demonstrate that higher ICOS expression correlates with more IL-10 production by NOD-derived T cells, and this may be responsible for the less severe EAE in NOD mice compared with Idd5.1 congenic mice. Paradoxically, alleles at the Idd5.1 locus have opposite effects on two autoimmune diseases, diabetes and EAE. This may reflect differential roles for costimulatory pathways in inducing autoimmune responses depending upon the origin (tissue) of the target Ag.
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PMID:The diabetes susceptibility locus Idd5.1 on mouse chromosome 1 regulates ICOS expression and modulates murine experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. 1521 Jul 70

Nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice develop multi-organ autoimmune diseases, including type 1 diabetes. We hypothesized that backcrossing the MHC region from SJL (H-2(s)) mice, which have an endogenous PLP(139-151)-reactive repertoire, onto the background of autoimmune-prone NOD mice would result in a mouse strain that is highly susceptible to experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). Unexpectedly, although we detected an endogenous PLP(139-151) repertoire in the NOD.S mice, they did not develop spontaneous EAE and were relatively resistant to PLP(139-151)-induced EAE when compared to SJL mice. This resistance was associated with lower production of proinflammatory cytokines and a decreased expansion of PLP(139-151)-specific CD4(+) T cells after immunization and restimulation with PLP peptide in vitro. V(beta) chain usage among PLP(139-151)-reactive T cells differed between SJL and NOD.S mice. Furthermore, NOD.S mice were resistant to the development of insulitis and cyclophosphamide-induced diabetes, but not sialadenitis. Altogether, even though NOD mice develop spontaneous autoimmune diseases, they become relatively resistant to induction of EAE even when they express the EAE-permissive class II molecule I-A(s). Our data show that certain combinations of otherwise susceptibility-conferring MHC and non-MHC genes can mediate autoimmune-disease resistance when they are paired together. These findings do not support the "shared autoimmune gene" hypothesis.
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PMID:Dissimilar background genes control susceptibility to autoimmune disease in the context of different MHC haplotypes: NOD.H-2(s) congenic mice are relatively resistant to both experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis and type I diabetes. 1521 31

The differences in pathologic findings of fatal cases of West Nile virus (WNV) encephalitis in the context of underlying conditions and illness duration are not well known. During 2002, we studied central nervous system (CNS) tissue samples from 23 patients who had serologic and immunohistochemical (IHC) evidence of a recent WNV infection. Fifteen patients had underlying medical conditions (5 malignancies, 3 renal transplants, 3 with diabetes or on dialysis, 2 with AIDS, and 2 receiving steroids). WNV serology was positive for 18 patients, negative for 2, and not available for 3. Perivascular lymphocytic infiltrates, microglial nodules, and loss of neurons were predominantly observed in the brainstem and anterior horns in the spinal cord. IHC using antibodies against flaviviruses and WNV showed viral antigens in 12 (52%) of 23 patients. Viral antigens were found inside neurons and neuronal processes predominantly in the brainstem and anterior horns. In general, the antigens were focal and sparse; however, in 4 severely immunosuppressed patients, extensive viral antigens were seen throughout the CNS. Positive IHC staining was observed in tissues of 7 of 8 patients who died within 1 week after illness onset, compared with 4 of 14 with more than 2 weeks' illness duration. WNV causes an encephalomyelitis by primarily affecting brainstem and spinal cord. Differences in the amount of viral antigen may be related to underlying medical conditions and length of survival. IHC can be an important diagnostic method, particularly during the 1st week of illness, when antigen levels are high.
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PMID:Clinicopathologic study and laboratory diagnosis of 23 cases with West Nile virus encephalomyelitis. 1529 65


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