Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C1862103 (BDC)
459 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The BDC 2.5 T cell clone is specific for pancreatic beta-cell antigen presented by I-Ag7, and greatly accelerates diabetes when injected into 10-21-d-old nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. The BDC 2.5 T cell receptor (TCR) has been solubilized as a TCR-IgG1 chimeric protein. All NOD mice immunized against BDC 2.5 TCR-IgG1 produced antibodies recognizing TCR C alpha/C beta epitopes that were inaccessible on the T cell surface. 56% of the mice produced antibodies against the BDC 2.5 clonotype that specifically blocked antigen activation of BDC 2.5 cells. We have used the adoptive transfer model of diabetes to demonstrate that maternal immunization with soluble TCR protects young mice from diabetes induced by the BDC 2.5 T cell clone.
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PMID:Immunization with soluble BDC 2.5 T cell receptor-immunoglobulin chimeric protein:antibody specificity and protection of nonobese diabetic mice against adoptive transfer of diabetes by maternal immunization. 892 Aug 64

To detect and characterize autoreactive T cells in diabetes-prone NOD mice, we have developed a multimeric MHC reagent with high affinity for the BDC-2.5 T cell receptor, which is reactive against a pancreatic autoantigen. A distinct population of T cells is detected in NOD mice that recognizes the same MHC/peptide target. These T cells are positively selected in the thymus at a surprisingly high frequency and exported to the periphery. They are activated specifically in the pancreatic LNs, demonstrating an autoimmune specificity that recapitulates that of the BDC-2.5 cell. These phenomena are also observed in mouse lines that share with NOD the H-2g7 MHC haplotype but carry diabetes-resistance background genes. Thus, a susceptible haplotype at the MHC seems to be the only element required for the selection and emergence of autoreactive T cells, without requiring other diabetogenic loci from the NOD genome.
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PMID:Susceptible MHC alleles, not background genes, select an autoimmune T cell reactivity. 1297 66

Foxp3-expressing regulatory T (T reg) cells derive primarily from selection in the thymus. Yet conversion of mature conventional CD4(+) T (T conv) cell lymphocytes can be achieved in several conditions, such as transforming growth factor beta treatment, homeostatic expansion, or chronic exposure to low-dose antigen. Such conversion might provide a means to generate peripheral tolerance by "converting" potentially damaging T cells that react to self-antigens. We tested this hypothesis in mice transgenic for the BDC2.5 T cell receptor (TCR), which is representative of a diabetogenic specificity that is naturally present in NOD mice and reactive against a pancreatic self-antigen. In the thymus, before any exposure to antigen, clonotype-positive T reg and T conv cells express a second TCRalpha chain derived from endogenous loci. High-throughput single-cell sequencing of secondary TCRs of the Valpha2 family showed their joining CDR3alpha regions to be very different in T reg and T conv cell thymocytes. These specific CDR3alpha motifs, thus, provided a "tag" with which to test the actual impact of T conv to T reg cell conversion in response to peripheral self-antigen; should the autoreactive clonotypic TCR induce T conv to T reg cell conversion upon encounter of cognate antigen in the pancreas or draining lymph node, one would expect to detect tag CDR3alpha motifs from T conv cells in the T reg cell populations. Sequencing large numbers of peripheral BDC(+)Valpha2(+) cells showed that little to no conversion occurs in response to this pancreatic autoantigen.
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PMID:TCR-based lineage tracing: no evidence for conversion of conventional into regulatory T cells in response to a natural self-antigen in pancreatic islets. 1772 31

Self-antigens expressed by apoptotic cells (ACs) may become targets for autoimmunity. Tolerance to these antigens is partly established by an ill-defined capacity of ACs to inhibit antigen-presenting cells such as dendritic cells (DCs). We present evidence that the receptor tyrosine kinase Mer (MerTK) has a key role in mediating AC-induced inhibition of DC activation/maturation. Pretreatment of DCs prepared from nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice with AC blocked secretion of proinflammatory cytokines, up-regulation of costimulatory molecule expression, and T cell activation. The effect of ACs on DCs was dependent on Gas6, which is a MerTK ligand. NOD DCs lacking MerTK expression (NOD.MerTK(KD/KD)) were resistant to AC-induced inhibition. Notably, autoimmune diabetes was exacerbated in NOD.MerTK(KD/KD) versus NOD mice expressing the transgenic BDC T cell receptor. In addition, beta cell-specific CD4(+) T cells adoptively transferred into NOD.MerTK(KD/KD) mice in which beta cell apoptosis was induced with streptozotocin exhibited increased expansion and differentiation into type 1 T cell effectors. In both models, the lack of MerTK expression was associated with an increased frequency of activated pancreatic CD11c(+)CD8alpha(+) DCs, which exhibited an enhanced T cell stimulatory capacity. These findings demonstrate that MerTK plays a critical role in regulating self-tolerance mediated between ACs, DCs, and T cells.
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PMID:MerTK is required for apoptotic cell-induced T cell tolerance. 1819 70

Adhesion and degranulation promoting adapter protein (ADAP), a positive regulator of T cell receptor (TCR) signaling, is required for thymocyte development and T cell homeostasis. To investigate the role of ADAP in a T cell-driven autoimmune response, we generated ADAP-deficient, BDC2.5 TCR transgenic, diabetes-prone (C57BL/6) mice (BDC/B6). We observed a striking enhancement of diabetes incidence in ADAP-deficient mice, both in animals homozygous for I-Ag7, and in mice carrying one I-Ab allele (BDC/B6g7/b). Increased disease correlates with significantly reduced numbers of pathological CD4(+) T cells in the mice. Consistent with a state of functional lymphopenia in ADAP-deficient BDC/B6g7/b mice, T cells display increased homeostatic proliferation. Transfer of syngeneic lymphocytes or T cells both blocks ADAP-dependent diabetes and relieves exaggerated homeostatic T cell proliferation observed in ADAP-deficient mice. Marked attenuation in cellularity of the CD4+ single-positive thymocyte compartment in ADAP-deficient BDC/B6g7/b animals suggests a mechanism for induction of the lymphopenia. We conclude that inefficient positive selection in ADAP deficiency results in lymphopenia that leads to enhanced autoimmune diabetes in the BDC/B6g7/b model. Our findings support the notion that ineffective thymic T cell output can be a powerful causative factor in lymphopenia-driven autoimmune diabetes.
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PMID:Defective positive selection results in T cell lymphopenia and increased autoimmune diabetes in ADAP-deficient BDC2.5-C57BL/6 mice. 1838 41

With the goal of identifying changes in gene expression in CD4(+) T cells during the development of diabetes in the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse, we used DNA microarrays to analyze gene expression in CD4(+) T cells from the pancreatic draining lymph nodes of NOD/BDC 2.5 T cell receptor transgenic and WT NOD mice at different ages. At 4 and 6 weeks of age, we found up-regulation of a number of genes that are known to be induced by IFN-alpha. IFN-alpha levels and IFN-alpha-producing plasmacytoid dendritic cells were increased in the PLNs of 3- to 4-week-old NOD mice. Moreover, blockade of IFN-alpha receptor 1 in NOD mice by a neutralizing antibody at 2-3 weeks of age significantly delayed the onset and decreased the incidence of type 1 diabetes, increased the relative number of immature dendritic cells in the PLNs, and enhanced the ability of spleen CD4(+) T cells to produce IL-4 and IL-10. These findings demonstrate that IFN-alpha in the PLNs is an essential initiator in the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes in NOD mice.
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PMID:Interferon-alpha initiates type 1 diabetes in nonobese diabetic mice. 1871 2