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1.
Cholesterol plays an essential role in determining cell membrane physico-chemical characteristics and functions. A proper membrane structure is critical in pancreatic β-cells for glucose-mediated insulin secretion, and alterations in cellular cholesterol content may negatively affect this process, leading to β-cell dysfunction. The low density lipoprotein receptor (LDL-R) appears to play a relevant role in ß-cell dysfunction due to cholesterol accumulation. This observation raised the question of whether hypocholesterolemic drugs which increase LDL-R expression might bear diabetogenic properties, thus increasing the risk of new-onset diabetes or worsen glycaemic parameters in diabetic patients.Being at higher cardiovascular risk, diabetic patients are usually treated with hypolipidemic drugs to correct the atherogenic dyslipidemia characteristic of this pathological condition. Statin therapy has been associated with an increased incidence of new-onset diabetes (NOD), being the diabetogenic effect depending on the type and dose of statin. However, it is worth noting that the benefits on cardiovascular mortality largely exceed the increased risk associated with the development of diabetes. Although genetic variants associated with lower levels of LDL-C are also associated with an increased NOD risk, clinical trials with lipid-lowering drugs other than statins, namely ezetimibe or monoclonal antibodies against PCSK9, did not observe an increase of developing diabetes.In summary, molecular evidence clearly points to a key role for cholesterol homeostasis in pancreatic β-cell function which, in humans, is negatively affected by statins. Available data exclude that this could be the case for other hypocholesterolemic approaches, but long-term studies are warranted to explore this critical aspect.  相似文献   

2.
Significant role for Fas in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diabetes   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22  
Programmed cell death represents an important pathogenic mechanism in various autoimmune diseases. Type I diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is a T cell-dependent autoimmune disease resulting in selective destruction of the beta cells of the islets of Langerhans. beta cell apoptosis has been associated with IDDM onset in both animal models and newly diagnosed diabetic patients. Several apoptotic pathways have been implicated in beta cell destruction, including Fas, perforin, and TNF-alpha. Evidence for Fas-mediated lysis of beta cells in the pathogenesis of IDDM in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice includes: 1) Fas-deficient NOD mice bearing the lpr mutation (NOD-lpr/lpr) fail to develop IDDM; 2) transgenic expression of Fas ligand (FasL) on beta cells in NOD mice may result in accelerated IDDM; and 3) irradiated NOD-lpr/lpr mice are resistant to adoptive transfer of diabetes by cells from NOD mice. However, the interpretation of these results is complicated by the abnormal immune phenotype of NOD-lpr/lpr mice. Here we present novel evidence for the role of Fas/FasL interactions in the progression of NOD diabetes using two newly derived mouse strains. We show that NOD mice heterozygous for the FasL mutation gld, which have reduced functional FasL expression on T cells but no lymphadenopathy, fail to develop IDDM. Further, we show that NOD-lpr/lpr mice bearing the scid mutation (NOD-lpr/lpr-scid/scid), which eliminates the enhanced FasL-mediated lytic activity induced by Fas deficiency, still have delayed onset and reduced incidence of IDDM after adoptive transfer of diabetogenic NOD spleen cells. These results provide evidence that Fas/FasL-mediated programmed cell death plays a significant role in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diabetes.  相似文献   

3.
The determinant spreading of T cell autoimmunity plays an important role in the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes and in the protective mechanism of Ag-based immunotherapy in NOD mice. However, little is known about the role of APCs, particularly B cells, in the spreading of T cell autoimmunity. We studied determinant spreading in NOD/scid or Igmu(-/-) NOD mice reconstituted with NOD T and/or B cells and found that mice with mature B cells (TB NOD/scid and BMB Igmu(-/-) NOD), but not mice that lacked mature B cells (T NOD/scid and BM Igmu(-/-) NOD), spontaneously developed Th1 autoimmunity, which spread sequentially among different beta cell Ags. Immunization of T NOD/scid and BM Igmu(-/-) NOD mice with a beta cell Ag could prime Ag-specific Th1 or Th2 responses, but those T cell responses did not spread to other beta cell Ags. In contrast, immunization of TB NOD/scid and BMB Igmu(-/-) NOD mice with a beta cell Ag in IFA induced Th2 responses, which spread to other beta cell Ags. Furthermore, we found that while macrophages and dendritic cells could evoke memory and effector T cell responses in vitro, B cells significantly enhanced the detection of spontaneously primed and induced Th1 responses to beta cell Ags. Our data suggest that B cells, but not other APCs, mediate the spreading of T cell responses during the type 1 diabetes process and following Ag-based immunotherapy. Conceivably, the modulation of the capacity of B cells to present Ag may provide new interventions for enhancing Ag-based immunotherapy and controlling autoimmune diseases.  相似文献   

4.
Type-1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disease targeting insulin-producing beta cells, resulting in dependence on exogenous insulin. To date, significant efforts have been invested to develop immune-modulatory therapies for T1D treatment. Previously, IL-2 immunotherapy was demonstrated to prevent and reverse T1D at onset in the non-obese diabetic (NOD) mouse model, revealing potential as a therapy in early disease stage in humans. In the NOD model, IL-2 deficiency contributes to a loss of regulatory T cell function. This deficiency can be augmented with IL-2 or antibody bound to IL-2 (Ab/IL-2) therapy, resulting in regulatory T cell expansion and potentiation. However, an understanding of the mechanism by which reconstituted regulatory T cell function allows for reversal of diabetes after onset is not clearly understood. Here, we describe that Ab/IL-2 immunotherapy treatment, given at the time of diabetes onset in NOD mice, not only correlated with reversal of diabetes and expansion of Treg cells, but also demonstrated the ability to significantly increase beta cell proliferation. Proliferation appeared specific to Ab/IL-2 immunotherapy, as anti-CD3 therapy did not have a similar effect. Furthermore, to assess the effect of Ab/IL-2 immunotherapy well after the development of diabetes, we tested the effect of delaying treatment for 4 weeks after diabetes onset, when beta cells were virtually absent. At this late stage after diabetes onset, Ab/IL-2 treatment was not sufficient to reverse hyperglycemia. However, it did promote survival in the absence of exogenous insulin. Proliferation of beta cells could not account for this improvement as few beta cells remained. Rather, abnormal insulin and glucagon dual-expressing cells were the only insulin-expressing cells observed in islets from mice with established disease. Thus, these data suggest that in diabetic NOD mice, beta cells have an innate capacity for regeneration both early and late in disease, which is revealed through IL-2 immunotherapy.  相似文献   

5.
Nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice transgenic for Fas ligand (FasL) on islet beta cells (HIPFasL mice) exhibit an accelerated diabetes distinct from the normal autoimmune diabetes of NOD mice. This study was undertaken to define the mechanism underlying accelerated diabetes development in HIPFasL mice. It was found that diabetes in HIPFasL mice is dependent on the NOD genetic background, as HIPFasL does not cause diabetes when crossed into other mice strains and is lymphocyte dependent, as it does not develop in HIPFasL(SCID) mice. Diabetes development in NOD(SCID) recipients of diabetic HIPFasL splenocytes is slower than when using splenocytes from diabetic NOD mice. Beta cells from HIPFasL mice are more susceptible to cytokine-induced apoptosis than wild-type NOD beta cells, and this can be blocked with anti-FasL Ab. HIPFasL islets are more rapidly destroyed than wild-type islets when transplanted into nondiabetic NOD mice. This confirms that FasL(+) islets do not obtain immune privilege, and instead NOD beta cells constitutively expressing FasL are more susceptible to apoptosis induced by Fas-FasL interaction. These findings are consistent with the accelerated diabetes of young HIPFasL mice being a different disease process from the autoimmune diabetes of wild-type NOD mice. The data support a mechanism by which cytokines produced by the insulitis lesion mediate up-regulation of beta cell Fas expression, resulting in suicide or fratricide of HIPFasL beta cells that overexpress FasL.  相似文献   

6.
Autoimmune diabetes is characterized by a chronic progressive inflammatory autoimmune reaction that ultimately causes the selective elimination of pancreatic beta cells. To address the question of whether the cell death-inducing cytokines TNF and lymphotoxin alpha are involved in this process, we generated nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice that are deficient for TNF receptor 1 (TNFR1 or TNFRp55). Insulitis developed in these mice similarly to that in normal control NOD mice, but progression to diabetes was completely abrogated. Since this was probably due to the complex immunomodulatory effects of TNF and lymphotoxin alpha signaled via TNFR1 on lymphohemopoietic cells, adoptive transfer experiments with spleen cells from diabetic NOD mice were conducted. It was found that the absence of TNFR1 in recipients delayed diabetes induced by normal control and precluded diabetes induced by perforin-deficient spleen cells. In a CD8+ T cell-mediated model of diabetes, however, diabetes induced by adoptive transfer of TCR transgenic lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus glycoprotein-specific CD8+ T cells was not delayed by the absence of TNFR1 in recipient mice. Together with the described expression patterns of perforin and TNF in the mononuclear islet infiltrates of NOD mice, these results indicate that two diabetogenic effector mechanisms are delivered by distinct cell populations: CD8+ T cells lyse beta cells via perforin-dependent cytotoxicity, whereas CD4+ T cells, macrophages, and dendritic cells contribute to diabetes development via TNFR1-dependent beta cell toxicity.  相似文献   

7.
Several death-signaling or death-inducing molecules have been implicated in beta cell destruction, including Fas, perforin, and TNFR-1. In this study, we examined the role of each death-signaling molecule in the IL-10-accelerated diabetes of nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. Groups of IL-10-NOD mice, each deficient in either Fas, perforin, or TNFR-1 molecules, readily developed insulitis, and subsequently succumbed to diabetes with an accelerated kinetics and incidence similar to that observed in their wild-type or heterozygous IL-10-NOD littermates. Similarly, a TNFR-2 deficiency did not block accelerated diabetes in IL-10-NOD mice and spontaneous diabetes in NOD mice. These results demonstrate that pancreatic IL-10 promotes diabetes independent of Fas, perforin, TNFR-1, and TNFR-2 molecules. Subsequently, when cyclophosphamide, a diabetes-inducing agent, was injected into insulitis-free NOD. lpr/lpr mice, none of these mice developed insulitis or diabetes. Our data suggest that cyclophosphamide- but not IL-10-induced diabetes is Fas dependent. Overall, these findings provide evidence that pancreatic expression of IL-10 promotes diabetes independent of the major death pathways and provide impetus for identification of novel death pathways precipitating autoimmune destruction of insulin-producing beta cells.  相似文献   

8.
The present study was undertaken to analyze the regulatory T cells generated in response to class I derived self-I-A beta(g7) (54-76) peptide. It was observed T cells from young unprimed type 1 diabetes (T1D) prone NOD mice did not respond to self-I-A beta(g7) (54-76) peptide although T cells from primed young NOD mice showed a strong response. T cells from young unprimed BALB/c mice responded to self-I-A beta(d) (62-78) peptide. However, a breakdown of tolerance to these peptides was observed with age in both the strains. Culture supernatant from I-A beta(g7) (54-76) peptide-primed cells secreted large amounts of TGF-beta and inhibited T cell responses in allogeneic-MLR. Further, I-A beta(g7) (54-76) peptide specific T cell lines from young (I-A.Y) and diabetic (I-A.D) NOD mice were established. I-A.Y secreted IL-4, TGF-beta and IL-10 while I-A.D T cell line secreted IL-10 and IFN-gamma. We found that I-A.D T cell line induced diabetes when transferred in NOD/SCID mice but I-A.Y T cell line did not induce disease. These results show that immunization of NOD mice with I-A beta(g7) (54-76) peptide at a younger age induces a regulatory T cell response suggesting that correcting the defects in immunoregulatory mechanisms using self-MHC peptides may be one of the approaches to prevent autoimmune diseases like T1D.  相似文献   

9.
Several studies have provided indirect evidence in support of a role for beta cell-specific Th2 cells in regulating insulin-dependent diabetes (IDDM). Whether a homogeneous population of Th2 cells having a defined beta cell Ag specificity can prevent or suppress autoimmune diabetes is still unclear. In fact, recent studies have demonstrated that beta cell-specific Th2 cell clones can induce IDDM. In this study we have established Th cell clones specific for glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65), a known beta cell autoantigen, from young unimmunized nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. Adoptive transfer of a GAD65-specific Th2 cell clone (characterized by the secretion of IL-4, IL-5, and IL-10, but not IFN-gamma or TGF-beta) into 2- or 12-wk-old NOD female recipients prevented the progression of insulitis and subsequent development of overt IDDM. This prevention was marked by the establishment of a Th2-like cytokine profile in response to a panel of beta cell autoantigens in cultures established from the spleen and pancreatic lymph nodes of recipient mice. The immunoregulatory function of a given Th cell clone was dependent on the relative levels of IFN-gamma vs IL-4 and IL-10 secreted. These results provide direct evidence that beta cell-specific Th2 cells can indeed prevent and suppress autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice.  相似文献   

10.
L-selectin is not required for T cell-mediated autoimmune diabetes   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Administration of anti-L-selectin (CD62L) mAb to neonatal nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice mediates long term protection against the development of insulitis and overt diabetes. These results suggested that CD62L has a key role in the general function of beta cell-specific T cells. To further examine the role of CD62L in the development of type 1 diabetes, NOD mice lacking CD62L were established. The onset and frequency of overt diabetes were equivalent among CD62L(+/+), CD62L(+/-), and CD62L(-/-) NOD littermates. Furthermore, patterns of T cell activation, migration, and beta cell-specific reactivity were similar in NOD mice of all three genotypes. Adoptive transfer experiments with CD62L(-/-) CD4(+) T cells prepared from BDC2.5 TCR transgenic mice revealed no apparent defects in migration to pancreatic lymph nodes, proliferation in response to beta cell Ag, or induction of diabetes in NOD.scid recipients. In conclusion, CD62L expression is not essential for the development of type 1 diabetes in NOD mice.  相似文献   

11.
The destruction of beta cells in type 1 diabetes (T1D) results in loss of insulin production and glucose homeostasis. Treatment of non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice with immune-depleting/modulating agents (e.g., anti-CD3, murine anti-thymocyte-globulin (mATG)) can lead to diabetes reversal. However, for preclinical studies with these and other agents seeking to reverse disease at onset, the necessity for exogenous insulin administration is debated. Spontaneously diabetic NOD mice were treated with a short-course of mATG and insulin provided as drug therapy or by way of allogeneic islet implants. Herein we demonstrate that exogenous insulin administration is required to achieve disease reversal with mATG in NOD mice. Unexpectedly, we also observed that provision of insulin by way of allogeneic islet implantation in combination with mATG leads to a pronounced reversal of diabetes as well as restoration of tolerance to self-islets. Expansion/induction of regulatory cells was observed in NOD mice stably cured with mATG and allogeneic islets. These data suggest that transient provision of allogeneic insulin-producing islets might provide a temporary window for immune depletion to be more effective and instilling stable tolerance to endogenous beta cells. These findings support the use of a never before explored approach for preserving beta cell function in patients with recent onset T1D.  相似文献   

12.
Adoptive transfer of diabetogenic CD4 Th1 T cell clones into young NOD or NOD.scid recipients rapidly induces onset of diabetes and also provides a system for analysis of the pancreatic infiltrate. Although many reports have suggested a role for macrophages in the inflammatory response, there has been little direct characterization of macrophage activity in the pancreas. We showed previously that after migration to the pancreas, diabetogenic CD4 T cell clones produce a variety of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines, resulting in the recruitment of macrophages. In this study, we investigated mechanisms by which macrophages are recruited and activated by T cells. Analysis of infiltrating cells after adoptive transfer by the diabetogenic T cell clone BDC-2.5 indicates that large numbers of cells staining for both F4/80 and CD11b are recruited into the pancreas where they are activated to make IL-1beta, TNF-alpha, and NO, and express the chemokine receptors CCR5, CXCR3, and CCR8. Diabetogenic CD4 T cell clones produce several inflammatory chemokines in vitro, but after adoptive transfer we found that the only chemokine that could be detected ex vivo was CCL1. These results provide the first evidence that CCR8/CCL1 interaction may play a role in type 1 diabetes through macrophage recruitment and activation.  相似文献   

13.
In type 1 diabetes, many effector mechanisms damage the beta cell, a key one being perforin/granzyme B production by CD8(+) T cells. The death receptor pathway has also been implicated in beta cell death, and we have therefore generated NOD mice that express a dominant-negative form of the Fas-associated death domain protein (FADD) adaptor to block death receptor signaling in beta cells. Islets developed normally in these animals, indicating that FADD is not necessary for beta cell development as it is for vasculogenesis. beta cells from the transgenic mice were resistant to killing via the Fas pathway in vitro. In vivo, a reduced incidence of diabetes was found in mice with higher levels of dominant-negative FADD expression. This molecule also blocked signals from the IL-1R in culture, protecting isolated islets from the toxic effects of cytokines and also marginally reducing the levels of Fas up-regulation. These data support a role for death receptors in beta cell destruction in NOD mice, but blocking the perforin/granzyme pathway would also be necessary for dominant-negative FADD to have a beneficial clinical effect.  相似文献   

14.
In type 1 diabetes, cytokine action on beta cells potentially contributes to beta cell destruction by direct cytotoxicity, inducing Fas expression, and up-regulating class I MHC and chemokine expression to increase immune recognition. To simultaneously block beta cell responsiveness to multiple cytokines, we overexpressed suppressor of cytokine signaling-1 (SOCS-1). This completely prevented progression to diabetes in CD8(+) TCR transgenic nonobese diabetic (NOD) 8.3 mice without affecting pancreas infiltration and partially prevented diabetes in nontransgenic NOD mice. SOCS-1 appeared to protect at least in part by inhibiting TNF- and IFN-gamma-induced Fas expression on beta cells. Fas expression was up-regulated on beta cells in vivo in prediabetic NOD8.3 mice, and this was inhibited by SOCS-1. Additionally, IFN-gamma-induced class I MHC up-regulation and TNF- and IFN-gamma-induced IL-15 expression by beta cells were inhibited by SOCS-1, which correlated with suppressed 8.3 T cell proliferation in vitro. Despite this, 8.3 T cell priming in vivo appeared unaffected. Therefore, blocking beta cell responses to cytokines impairs recognition by CD8(+) T cells and blocks multiple mechanisms of beta cell destruction, but does not prevent T cell priming and recruitment to the islets. Our findings suggest that increasing SOCS-1 expression may be useful as a strategy to block CD8(+) T cell-mediated type 1 diabetes as well as to more generally prevent cytokine-dependent tissue destruction in inflammatory diseases.  相似文献   

15.
In type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes evidence for an autoimmune process is now fully established. This is also true for a similar disease observed in the NOD mouse and the BB rat. In addition to circulating antipancreatic antibodies, we demonstrated T-lymphocyte mediated cellular immunity in both these diabetic animals and in the human. Immunological abnormalities precede the development of diabetes and may be responsible for beta cell alteration. Evidence for this interpretation appears stronger for cell-mediated than for humoral immunity. However, full demonstration and understanding of the relationship between anti-beta cell immunity and beta cell alteration still raise many unresolved problems.  相似文献   

16.
CXCL10, a chemokine for Th1 cells, is involved in the pathogenesis of various Th1-dominant autoimmune diseases. Type 1 diabetes is considered to be a Th1-dominant autoimmune disease, and a suppressive effect of CXCL10 neutralization on diabetes development has been reported in a cyclophosphamide-induced accelerated diabetes model through induction of beta cell proliferation. However, intervention in a diabetes model might bring about opposite effects, depending on the timing, amount, or method of treatment. In the present study, we examined the effect of CXCL10 neutralization in a "spontaneous diabetes" model of NOD mice, using CXCL10 DNA vaccination (pCAGGS-CXCL10). pCAGGS-CXCL10 treatment in young NOD mice induced the production of anti-CXCL10 Ab in vivo and suppressed the incidence of spontaneous diabetes, although this treatment did not inhibit insulitis or alter the immunological response. pCAGGS-CXCL10 treatment enhanced the proliferation of pancreatic beta cells, resulting in an increase of beta cell mass in this spontaneous diabetes model as well. Therefore, CXCL10 neutralization is suggested to be useful for maintaining beta cell mass at any stage of autoimmune diabetes.  相似文献   

17.
The caspase-3-generated RasGAP N-terminal fragment (fragment N) inhibits apoptosis in a Ras-PI3K-Akt-dependent manner. Fragment N protects various cell types, including insulin-secreting cells, against different types of stresses. Whether fragment N exerts a protective role during the development of type 1 diabetes is however not known. Non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice represent a well-known model for spontaneous development of type 1 diabetes that shares similarities with the diseases encountered in humans. To assess the role of fragment N in type 1 diabetes development, a transgene encoding fragment N under the control of the rat insulin promoter (RIP) was back-crossed into the NOD background creating the NOD-RIPN strain. Despite a mosaic expression of fragment N in the beta cell population of NOD-RIPN mice, islets isolated from these mice were more resistant to apoptosis than control NOD islets. Islet lymphocytic infiltration and occurrence of a mild increase in glycemia developed with the same kinetics in both strains. However, the period of time separating the mild increase in glycemia and overt diabetes was significantly longer in NOD-RIPN mice compared to the control NOD mice. There was also a significant decrease in the number of apoptotic beta cells in situ at 16 weeks of age in the NOD-RIPN mice. Fragment N exerts therefore a protective effect on beta cells within the pro-diabetogenic NOD background and this prevents a fast progression from mild to overt diabetes.  相似文献   

18.
B cell-deficient nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice are protected from the development of spontaneous autoimmune diabetes, suggesting a requisite role for Ag presentation by B lymphocytes for the activation of a diabetogenic T cell repertoire. This study specifically examines the importance of B cell-mediated MHC class II Ag presentation as a regulator of peripheral T cell tolerance to islet beta cells. We describe the construction of NOD mice with an I-Ag7 deficiency confined to the B cell compartment. Analysis of these mice, termed NOD BCIID, revealed the presence of functionally competent non-B cell APCs (macrophages/dendritic cells) with normal I-Ag7 expression and capable of activating Ag-reactive T cells. In addition, the secondary lymphoid organs of these mice harbored phenotypically normal CD4+ and CD8+ T cell compartments. Interestingly, whereas control NOD mice harboring I-Ag7-sufficient B cells developed diabetes spontaneously, NOD BCIID mice were resistant to the development of autoimmune diabetes. Despite their diabetes resistance, histologic examination of pancreata from NOD BCIID mice revealed foci of noninvasive peri-insulitis that could be intentionally converted into a destructive process upon treatment with cyclophosphamide. We conclude that I-Ag7-mediated Ag presentation by B cells serves to overcome a checkpoint in T cell tolerance to islet beta cells after their initial targeting has occurred. Overall, this work indicates that the full expression of the autoimmune potential of anti-islet T cells in NOD mice is intimately regulated by B cell-mediated MHC class II Ag presentation.  相似文献   

19.
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.  相似文献   

20.
Rotaviruses are implicated as a viral trigger for the acceleration of type 1 diabetes in children. Infection of adult non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice with rotavirus strain RRV accelerates diabetes development, whereas RRV infection in infant NOD mice delays diabetes onset. In this study of infant mice, RRV titers and lymphocyte populations in the intestine, mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) and thymus of NOD mice were compared with those in diabetes-resistant BALB/c and C57BL/6 mice. Enhanced intestinal RRV infection occurred in NOD mice compared with the other mouse strains. This was associated with increases in the frequency of CD8αβ TCRαβ intraepithelial lymphocytes, and their PD-L1 expression. Virus spread to the MLN and T cell numbers there also were greatest in NOD mice. Thymic RRV infection is shown here in all mouse strains, often in combination with alterations in T cell ontogeny. Infection lowered thymocyte numbers in infant NOD and C57BL/6 mice, whereas thymocyte production was unaltered overall in infant BALB/c mice. In the NOD mouse thymus, effector CD4+ T cell numbers were reduced by infection, whereas regulatory T cell numbers were maintained. It is proposed that maintenance of thymic regulatory T cell numbers may contribute to the increased suppression of inflammatory T cells in response to a strong stimulus observed in pancreatic lymph nodes of adult mice infected as infants. These findings show that rotavirus replication is enhanced in diabetes-prone mice, and provide evidence that thymic T cell alterations may contribute to the delayed diabetes onset following RRV infection.  相似文献   

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