Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (type 1 diabetes)
20,749 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Many tissue-specific autoimmune diseases are mediated by the induction of autoantigen-specific T cells. These cells are believed to cause tissue damage through the production of cytokines, through direct lysis of cells expressing self-antigens, or through the induction of inflammatory responses. The escape from self-tolerance or anergy is a prerequisite for initiation of an autoimmune process. INS-HA (insulin-hemagglutinin) transgenic mice express the HA of A PR8 34 influenza virus in the pancreatic beta-cells under the rat insulin promotor. TCR-HA (T cell receptor-hemagglutinin) transgenic mice express the TCR specific for the immunodominant epitope HA110-120 from the same virus. Double transgenic (dTg) mice expressing both genes represent an excellent model for understanding the mechanism leading to autoimmune diabetes independently of susceptibility genes. In order to gain information on the breaking down of neonatal self-tolerance we studied the occurrence of insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) after birth. Our results showed that newborn mice develop fulminant IDDM characterized by occurrence of insulitis as early as 3 days after birth, followed by hyperglycemia by 7 days, and significant hypoinsulinemia by 28 days. Such "double transgenic" mice expressing wild-type or targeted IL-4R alpha genes were examined for the onset of IDDM. Eight of eleven mice homozygous for the wild-type IL-4R alpha were hyperglycemic by 8 weeks of age, whereas only 1 of 16 mice homozygous for the targeted allele were hyperglycemic at this time. Most IL-4R alpha -/- mice remained normoglycemic to 36 weeks of age. Although only 10% of double transgenic mice homozygous for wild-type IL-4R alpha allele survived to 30 weeks, 80% of mice homozygous for the targeted allele did so. Even as late as 270 days of age, mice homozygous for the targeted allele had no insulitis or only peri-insulitis. Heterozygous mice displayed an intermediate frequency of diabetes. The IL-4R alpha chain acts as the high affinity binding chain and the principal signaling chain for IL-4; it also acts as the signaling chain for IL-13, but in this case the IL-13R alpha 1 chain conveys the bulk of the cytokine specificity. Thus, IL-4R alpha knock-out mice are unresponsive to both IL-4 and IL-13. The finding that the lack of IL-4R alpha chain protects TCR-HA, INS-HA double transgenic mice against diabetes, and death implies that either IL-4 or IL-13 plays a role in the progression of this disease. These studies demonstrate that TCR-HA, INS-HA double transgenic mice may provide a useful model to evaluate new strategies for the prevention of diabetes.
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PMID:Cellular mechanisms involved in experimental insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 1216 74

Type 1 diabetes mellitus is caused by the T cell mediated autoimmune destruction of insulin-producing beta cells of the islets of Langerhans within the pancreas. Current immunotherapy strategies are aimed at directly inactivating the autoreactive T cells and/or inducing T cells with regulatory capabilities. At the preclinical level, several strategies that employ TCR antagonists -- including monoclonal antibodies, autoantigen-specific peptides and soluble TCR ligands -- are showing promise and being developed for clinical application. Several of these approaches employing monoclonal antibodies against the TCR-CD3 complex or soluble peptide antigens are producing favorable results in the clinic.
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PMID:Immunotherapy of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 1218 68

Nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice expressing the BDC2.5 TCR transgene are useful for studying type 1 diabetes. Several peptides have been identified that are highly active in stimulating BDC2.5 T cells. Herein, we describe the use of I-Ag7 tetramers containing two such peptides, p79 and p17, to detect and characterize peptide-specific T cells. The tetramers could stain CD4(+) T cells in the islets and spleens of BDC2.5 transgenic mice. The percentage of CD4(+), tetramer(+) T cells increased in older mice, and it was generally higher in the islets than in the spleens. Our results also showed that tetAg7/p79 could stain a small population of CD4(+) T cells in both islets and spleens of NOD mice. The percentage of CD4(+), tetramer(+) T cells increased in cells that underwent further cell division after being activated by peptides. The avidity of TCRs on purified tetAg7/p79(+) T cells for tetAg7/p79 was slightly lower than that of BDC2.5 T cells. Although tetAg7/p79(+) T cells, like BDC2.5 T cells, secreted a large quantity of IFN-gamma, they were biased toward being IL-10-producing cells. Additionally, <3% of these cells expressed TCR Vbeta4. In vivo adoptive transfer experiments showed that NOD/scid recipient mice cotransferred with tetAg7/p79(+) T cells and NOD spleen cells, like mice transferred with NOD spleen cells only, developed diabetes. Therefore, we have generated Ag-specific tetramers that could detect a heterogeneous population of T cells, and a very small number of NOD mouse T cells may represent BDC2.5-like cells.
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PMID:Detection and characterization of T cells specific for BDC2.5 T cell-stimulating peptides. 1268 29

Fas (CD95) is a potential mechanism of pancreatic beta cell death in type 1 diabetes. beta cells do not constitutively express Fas but it is induced by cytokines. The hypothesis of this study is that Fas expression should be measurable on beta cells for them to be killed by this mechanism. We have previously reported that up to 5% of beta cells isolated from nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice are positive for Fas expression by flow cytometry using autofluorescence to identify beta cells. We have now found that these are not beta cells but contaminating dendritic cells, macrophages, and B lymphocytes. In contrast beta cells isolated from NODscid mice that are recipients of T lymphocytes from diabetic NOD mice express Fas 18-25 days after adoptive transfer but before development of diabetes. Fas expression on beta cells was also observed in BDC2.5, 8.3, and 4.1 TCR-transgenic models of diabetes in which diabetes occurs more rapidly than in unmodified NOD mice. In conclusion, Fas is observed on beta cells in models of diabetes in which rapid beta cell destruction occurs. Its expression is likely to reflect differences in the intraislet cytokine environment compared with the spontaneous model and may indicate a role for this pathway in beta cell destruction in rapidly progressive models.
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PMID:Fas is detectable on beta cells in accelerated, but not spontaneous, diabetes in nonobese diabetic mice. 1279 62

Natural killer T cells are an immunoregulatory population of lymphocytes that plays a critical role in controlling the adaptive immune system and contributes to the regulation of autoimmune responses. We have previously reported deficiencies in the numbers and function of NKT cells in the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse strain, a well-validated model of type 1 diabetes and systemic lupus erythematosus. In this study, we report the results of a genetic linkage analysis of the genes controlling NKT cell numbers in a first backcross (BC1) from C57BL/6 to NOD.Nkrp1(b) mice. The numbers of thymic NKT cells of 320 BC1 mice were determined by fluorescence-activated cell analysis using anti-TCR Ab and CD1/alpha-galactosylceramide tetramer. Tail DNA of 138 female BC1 mice was analyzed for PCR product length polymorphisms at 181 simple sequence repeats, providing greater than 90% coverage of the autosomal genome with an average marker separation of 8 cM. Two loci exhibiting significant linkage to NKT cell numbers were identified; the most significant (Nkt1) was on distal chromosome 1, in the same region as the NOD mouse lupus susceptibility gene Babs2/Bana3. The second most significant locus (Nkt2) mapped to the same region as Idd13, a NOD-derived diabetes susceptibility gene on chromosome 2.
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PMID:Genetic control of NKT cell numbers maps to major diabetes and lupus loci. 1296 Mar 9

The MHC determines susceptibility and resistance to type 1 diabetes in humans and nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. To investigate how a disease-associated MHC molecule shapes the T cell repertoire in NOD mice, we generated a series of tetramers from I-A(g7)/class II-associated invariant chain peptide precursors by peptide exchange. No CD4 T cell populations could be identified for two glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 peptides, but tetramers with a peptide mimetic recognized by the BDC-2.5 and other islet-specific T cell clones labeled a distinct population in the thymus of young NOD mice. Tetramer-positive cells were identified in the immature CD4(+)CD8(low) population that arises during positive selection, and in larger numbers in the more mature CD4(+)CD8(-) population. Tetramer labeling was specific based on the use of multiple control tetramers, including one with a single amino acid analog peptide in which a critical TCR contact residue was substituted. The T cell population was already present in the thymus of 2-wk-old NOD mice before the typical onset of insulitis and was detected in B10 mice congenic for the NOD MHC locus, but not B10 control mice. These results demonstrate that a T cell population can expand in the thymus of NOD mice to levels that are at least two to three orders of magnitude higher than estimated for a given specificity in the naive T cell pool. Based on these data, we propose a model in which I-A(g7) confers susceptibility to type 1 diabetes by biasing positive selection in the thymus and later presenting peptides from islet autoantigens to such T cells in the periphery.
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PMID:Ex vivo analysis of thymic CD4 T cells in nonobese diabetic mice with tetramers generated from I-A(g7)/class II-associated invariant chain peptide precursors. 1453 Mar 40

In type 1 diabetes, autoimmune T cells cause destruction of pancreatic beta cells by largely unknown mechanism. Previous analyses have shown that beta cell destruction is delayed but can occur in perforin-deficient nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice and that Fas-deficient NOD mice do not develop diabetes. However, because of possible pleiotropic functions of Fas, it was not clear whether the Fas receptor was an essential mediator of beta cell death in type 1 diabetes. To directly test this hypothesis, we have generated a beta cell-specific knockout of the Fas gene in a transgenic model of type 1 autoimmune diabetes in which CD4+ T cells with a transgenic TCR specific for influenza hemagglutinin (HA) are causing diabetes in mice that express HA under control of the rat insulin promoter. Here we show that the Fas-deficient mice develop autoimmune diabetes with slightly accelerated kinetics indicating that Fas-dependent apoptosis of beta cells is a dispensable mode of cell death in this disease.
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PMID:Effective destruction of Fas-deficient insulin-producing beta cells in type 1 diabetes. 1453 Mar 78

Regulatory anti-diabetogenic T cells (T(reg)) can be induced by the mucosal administration of insulin or proinsulin peptides, in the non-obese diabetic (NOD) mouse model of autoimmune type 1 diabetes. Naso-respirtory insulin (which avoids insulin degradation) induces CD8+ alpha(alpha) TCR gamma(delta) T(reg) whereas peptides that bind to the NOD MHC class II molecule, I-Ag7, insulin B9-23 and proinsulin B24-C36, induce CD4+ T(regs) Following naso-respiratory delivery of insulin to NOD mice increased numbers of CD8+ gamma(delta) T cells expressing interleukin (IL)10 are detected in the pancreatic lymph nodes. Neonatal (3 day) thymectomy (NTX) dramatically accelerates diabetes development in NOD mice, associated with lymphopaenia and a block in the maturation of mucosal intrepithelial lymphocytes (IEL), especially extrathymic-derived CD8+ alpha(alpha) TCR gamma(delta) IEL. Regulatory anti-diabetogenic T cells cannot be elicited by naso-respiratory insulin in NTX-NOD mice. Reconstitution of NTX-NOD mice with CD8+ alpha(alpha) TCR gamma(delta) T cells prevents diabetes. CD8+ gamma(delta) T(reg) are conceivably physiological and insulin-specific, induced by exposure to insulin in maternal milk. These findings infer an immunoregulatory role for extrathymic-derived IEL, developing under the influence of the thymus and conditioned by early exposure to the exogenous environment.
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PMID:(Pro)insulin-specific regulatory T cells. 1460 16

Proinflammatory cytokines are believed to be important in pancreatic beta-cell destruction in the development of type 1 diabetes. They act by upregulation of genes including Fas and inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), which have both been shown to lead to beta-cell death in vitro. We used mice deficient in the interleukin (IL)-1 receptor (IL-1R) to assess the contribution of IL-1 to different models of diabetes. IL-1R-deficient islets were protected from the damaging effects of tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and interferon (IFN)-gamma in vitro, and beta-cell expression of iNOS was reduced, suggesting that IL-1 mediates the induction of iNOS by TNF and IFN-gamma. IL-1 action was not required for induction of class I major histocompatibility complex or Fas by TNF and IFN-gamma. IL-1R-deficient nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice developed diabetes significantly slower than wild-type mice. IL-1R deficiency did not affect diabetes in 8.3 TCR transgenic NOD mice but prolonged the time to diabetes in BDC2.5 TCR transgenic NOD mice. We conclude that IL-1R deficiency slows progression to diabetes in NOD mice but on its own does not prevent diabetes.
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PMID:IL-1 receptor deficiency slows progression to diabetes in the NOD mouse. 1469 5

Development of autoreactive CD4 T cells contributing to type 1 diabetes (T1D) in both humans and nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice is either promoted or dominantly inhibited by particular MHC class II variants. In addition, it is now clear that when co-expressed with other susceptibility genes, some common MHC class I variants aberrantly mediate autoreactive CD8 T cell responses also essential to T1D development. However, it was unknown whether the development of diabetogenic CD8 T cells could also be dominantly inhibited by particular MHC variants. We addressed this issue by crossing NOD mice transgenically expressing the TCR from the diabetogenic CD8 T cell clone AI4 with NOD stocks congenic for MHC haplotypes that dominantly inhibit T1D. High numbers of functional AI4 T cells only developed in controls homozygously expressing NOD-derived H2(g7) molecules. In contrast, heterozygous expression of some MHC haplotypes conferring T1D resistance anergized AI4 T cells through decreased TCR (H2(b)) or CD8 expression (H2(q)). Most interestingly, while AI4 T cells exert a class I-restricted effector function, H2(nb1) MHC class II molecules can contribute to their negative selection. These findings provide insights to how particular MHC class I and class II variants interactively regulate the development of diabetogenic T cells and the TCR promiscuity of such autoreactive effectors.
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PMID:MHC class II molecules play a role in the selection of autoreactive class I-restricted CD8 T cells that are essential contributors to type 1 diabetes development in nonobese diabetic mice. 1470 58


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