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1.
Semi-invariant NK T cell (iNKT) deficiency has long been associated with the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes (T1D), but the linkage between this the deficiency and T1D susceptibility gene(s) remains unclear. We analyzed NOD mice subcongenic for resistant alleles of Idd9 locus in search for protective mechanisms against T1D, and found that iNKT cell development was significantly enhanced with a more advanced mature phenotype and function in mice containing Idd9.1 sublocus of B10 origin. The enhanced iNKT cell development and function suppressed effector function of diabetogenic T cells. Elimination of iNKT cells by CD1d deficiency almost abolished T1D protection in these mice. Interestingly, although the iNKT cells were responsible for a Th2 orientated cytokine profile that is often regarded as a mechanism of T1D prevention, our data suggests that the Th2 bias played little if any role for the protection. In addition, dendritic cells from the congenic NOD mice showed increased abilities to engage and potentiate iNKT cells, suggesting that a mechanism mediated by dendritic cells or other APCs may be critical for the enhanced development and maturation of iNKT cells. The products of T1D susceptibility gene(s) in Idd9.1 locus may be a key factor for this mechanism.  相似文献   

2.
The regulatory function of invariant NKT (iNKT) cells for tolerance induction and prevention of autoimmunity is linked to a specific cytokine profile that comprises the secretion of type 2 cytokines like IL-4 and IL-10 (NKT2 cytokine profile). The mechanism responsible for iNKT cell differentiation toward a type 2 phenotype is unknown. Herein we show that costimulatory signals provided by the surface receptor signaling lymphocytic activation molecule (SLAM) on myeloid dendritic cells (mDC) to iNKT cells is crucial for NKT2 orientation. Additionally, we demonstrate that the impaired acquisition of an NKT2 cytokine phenotype in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice that spontaneously develop autoimmune diabetes is due to defective SLAM-induced signals generated by NOD mDC. Mature mDC of C57BL/6 mice express SLAM and induce C57BL/6 or NOD iNKT cells to acquire a predominant NKT2 cytokine phenotype in response to antigenic stimulation with the iNKT cell-specific Ag, the alpha-galactosylceramide. In contrast, mature NOD mDC express significantly lower levels of SLAM and are unable to promote GATA-3 (the SLAM-induced intracellular signal) up-regulation and IL-4/IL-10 production in iNKT cells from NOD or C57BL/6 mice. NOD mice carry a genetic defect of the Slamf1 gene that is associated with reduced SLAM expression on double-positive thymocytes and altered iNKT cell development in the thymus. Our data suggest that the genetic Slamf1 defect in NOD mice also affects SLAM expression on other immune cells such as the mDC, thus critically impairing the peripheral differentiation of iNKT cells toward a regulatory NKT2 type.  相似文献   

3.
T cell-mediated autoimmune type-1 diabetes (T1D) in NOD mice partly results from this strain's numerical and functional defects in invariant NK T (iNKT) cells. T1D is inhibited in NOD mice treated with the iNKT cell superagonist alpha-galactosylceramide through a process involving enhanced accumulation of immunotolerogenic dendritic cells in pancreatic lymph nodes. Conversely, T1D is accelerated in NOD mice lacking CD38 molecules that play a role in dendritic cell migration to inflamed tissues. Unlike in standard NOD mice, alpha-galactosylceramide pretreatment did not protect the CD38-deficient stock from T1D induced by an adoptively transferred pancreatic beta cell-autoreactive CD8 T cell clone (AI4). We found that in the absence of CD38, ADP-ribosyltransferase 2 preferentially activates apoptotic deletion of peripheral iNKT cells, especially the CD4+ subset. Therefore, this study documents a previously unrecognized role for CD38 in maintaining survival of an iNKT cell subset that preferentially contributes to the maintenance of immunological tolerance.  相似文献   

4.
We explored in this study the status and potential role of IL-17-producing iNKT cells (iNKT17) in type 1 diabetes (T1D) by analyzing these cells in patients with T1D, and in NOD mice, a mouse model for T1D. Our analysis in mice showed an increase of iNKT17 cells in NOD vs control C57BL/6 mice, partly due to a better survival of these cells in the periphery. We also found a higher frequency of these cells in autoimmune-targeted organs with the occurrence of diabetes, suggesting their implication in the disease development. In humans, though absent in fresh PMBCs, iNKT17 cells are detected in vitro with a higher frequency in T1D patients compared to control subjects in the presence of the proinflammatory cytokine IL-1β, known to contribute to diabetes occurrence. These IL-1β-stimulated iNKT cells from T1D patients keep their potential to produce IFN-γ, a cytokine that drives islet β-cell destruction, but not IL-4, with a reverse picture observed in healthy volunteers. On the whole, our results argue in favour of a potential role of IL-17-producing iNKT cells in T1D and suggest that inflammation in T1D patients could induce a Th1/Th17 cytokine secretion profile in iNKT cells promoting disease development.  相似文献   

5.
Stimulated by an agonistic ligand, alpha-galactosylceramide (alphaGalCer), invariant NKT (iNKT) cells are capable of both eliciting antitumor responses and suppressing autoimmunity, while they become anergic after an initial phase of activation. It is unknown how iNKT cells act as either activators or regulators in different settings of cellular immunity. We examined effects of alphaGalCer administration on autoimmune inflammation and characterized phenotypes and functional status of iNKT cells and dendritic cells in alphaGalCer-treated NOD mice. Although iNKT cells became and remained anergic after the initial exposure to their ligand, anergic iNKT cells induce noninflammatory DCs in response to alphaGalCer restimulation, whereas activated iNKT cells induce immunogenic maturation of DCs in a small time window after the priming. Induction of noninflammatory DCs results in the activation and expansion of islet-specific T cells with diminished proinflammatory cytokine production. The noninflammatory DCs function at inflammation sites in an Ag-specific fashion, and the persistence of noninflammatory DCs critically inhibits autoimmune pathogenesis in NOD mice. Anergic differentiation is a regulatory event that enables iNKT cells to transform from promoters to suppressors, down-regulating the ongoing inflammatory responses, similar to other regulatory T cells, through a ligand-dependent mechanism.  相似文献   

6.
Reduced numbers and function of invariant NKT (iNKT) cells partially contribute to type 1 diabetes (T1D) development in NOD mice. Previous linkage analysis identified a genetic locus on chromosome 2 controlling numbers of thymic iNKT cells. Interestingly, this locus resides within the Idd13 region that distinguishes NOD mice from the closely genetically related, but strongly T1D-resistant NOR strain. Thus, we tested if a genetic variant that confers T1D resistance in NOR mice may do so by enhancing iNKT cell numbers. iNKT cells were enumerated by an α-GalCer analog loaded CD1d tetramer in NOD and NOR mice as well as in NOD stocks carrying NOR-derived congenic regions on chromosome 1, 2, or 4. Significantly, more thymic and splenic iNKT cells were present in NOR than NOD mice. The NOR-derived Idd13 region on chromosome 2 contributed the most significant effect on increasing iNKT cell numbers. Subcongenic analyses indicated that at least two genes within the Idd13 region regulate iNKT cell numbers. These results further define the genetic basis for numerical iNKT cell defects contributing to T1D development in NOD mice.  相似文献   

7.
The number and function of immunoregulatory invariant NKT (iNKT) cells are genetically controlled. A defect of iNKT cell ontogeny and function has been implicated as one causal factor of NOD mouse susceptibility to type 1 diabetes. Other factors of diabetes susceptibility, such as a decrease of regulatory T cell function or an increase in TLR1 expression, are corrected in diabetes-resistant Idd6 NOD.C3H 6.VIII congenic mice. Thus, we surmised that the iNKT cell defects found in NOD mice may also be rescued in congenic mice. Unexpectedly, we found, in both the thymus and the periphery, a 50% reduction in iNKT cell number in NOD.C3H 6.VIII mice as compared with NOD mice. This reduction only affected CD4(+) iNKT cells, and left the double negative iNKT cells unchanged. In parallel, the production of IL-4 and IFN-gamma following alpha-GalCer stimulation was proportionally reduced. Using three subcongenic strains, we have narrowed down the region controlling iNKT development within Idd6 (5.8 Mb) to Idd6.2 region (2.5 Mb). Idd6 region had no effect on NK cell number and in vivo cytotoxic activity. These results indicate that the role of iNKT cells in diabetes development is equivocal and more complex than initially considered. In addition, they bring strong evidence that the regulation of CD4(+) iNKT cell production is independent from that of DN iNKT cells, and involves genes of the Idd6 locus.  相似文献   

8.
Progression of spontaneous autoimmune diabetes is associated with development of a disease-countering negative-feedback regulatory loop that involves differentiation of low-avidity autoreactive CD8(+) cells into memory-like autoregulatory T cells. Such T cells blunt diabetes progression by suppressing the presentation of both cognate and noncognate Ags to pathogenic high-avidity autoreactive CD8(+) T cells in the pancreas-draining lymph nodes. In this study, we show that development of autoregulatory CD8(+) T cell memory is CD4(+) T cell dependent. Transgenic (TG) NOD mice expressing a low-affinity autoreactive TCR were completely resistant to autoimmune diabetes, even after systemic treatment of the mice with agonistic anti-CD40 or anti-4-1BB mAbs or autoantigen-pulsed dendritic cells, strategies that dramatically accelerate diabetes development in TG NOD mice expressing a higher affinity TCR for the same autoantigenic specificity. Furthermore, whereas abrogation of RAG-2 expression, hence endogenous CD4(+) T cell and B cell development, decelerated disease progression in high-affinity TCR-TG NOD mice, it converted the low-affinity TCR into a pathogenic one. In agreement with these data, polyclonal CD4(+) T cells from prediabetic NOD mice promoted disease in high-affinity TCR-TG NOD.Rag2(-/-) mice, but inhibited it in low-affinity TCR-TG NOD.Rag2(-/-) mice. Thus, in chronic autoimmune responses, CD4(+) Th cells contribute to both promoting and suppressing pathogenic autoimmunity.  相似文献   

9.
Invariant NK T (iNKT) cells regulate immune responses, express NK cell markers and an invariant TCR, and recognize lipid Ags in a CD1d-restricted manner. Previously, we reported that activation of iNKT cells by alpha-galactosylceramide (alpha-GalCer) protects against type 1 diabetes (T1D) in NOD mice via an IL-4-dependent mechanism. To further investigate how iNKT cells protect from T1D, we analyzed whether iNKT cells require the presence of another subset(s) of regulatory T cells (Treg), such as CD4+ CD25+ Treg, for this protection. We found that CD4+ CD25+ T cells from NOD.CD1d(-/-) mice deficient in iNKT cell function similarly in vitro to CD4+ CD25+ T cells from wild-type NOD mice and suppress the proliferation of NOD T responder cells upon alpha-GalCer stimulation. Cotransfer of NOD diabetogenic T cells with CD4+ CD25+ Tregs from NOD mice pretreated with alpha-GalCer demonstrated that activated iNKT cells do not influence the ability of T(regs) to inhibit the transfer of T1D. In contrast, protection from T1D mediated by transfer of activated iNKT cells requires the activity of CD4+ CD25+ T cells, because splenocytes pretreated with alpha-GalCer and then inactivated by anti-CD25 of CD25+ cells did not protect from T1D. Similarly, mice inactivated of CD4+ CD25+ T cells before alpha-GalCer treatment were also not protected from T1D. Our data suggest that CD4+ CD25+ T cells retain their function during iNKT cell activation, and that the activity of CD4+ CD25+ Tregs is required for iNKT cells to transfer protection from T1D.  相似文献   

10.
Leading hypotheses to explain helminth-mediated protection against autoimmunity postulate that type 2 or regulatory immune responses induced by helminth infections in the host limit pathogenic Th1-driven autoimmune responses. We tested these hypotheses by investigating whether infection with the filarial nematode Litomosoides sigmodontis prevents diabetes onset in IL-4-deficient NOD mice and whether depletion or absence of regulatory T cells, IL-10, or TGF-β alters helminth-mediated protection. In contrast to IL-4-competent NOD mice, IL-4-deficient NOD mice failed to develop a type 2 shift in either cytokine or Ab production during L. sigmodontis infection. Despite the absence of a type 2 immune shift, infection of IL-4-deficient NOD mice with L. sigmodontis prevented diabetes onset in all mice studied. Infections in immunocompetent and IL-4-deficient NOD mice were accompanied by increases in CD4(+)CD25(+)Foxp3(+) regulatory T cell frequencies and numbers, respectively, and helminth infection increased the proliferation of CD4(+)Foxp3(+) cells. However, depletion of CD25(+) cells in NOD mice or Foxp3(+) T cells from splenocytes transferred into NOD.scid mice did not decrease helminth-mediated protection against diabetes onset. Continuous depletion of the anti-inflammatory cytokine TGF-β, but not blockade of IL-10 signaling, prevented the beneficial effect of helminth infection on diabetes. Changes in Th17 responses did not seem to play an important role in helminth-mediated protection against autoimmunity, because helminth infection was not associated with a decreased Th17 immune response. This study demonstrates that L. sigmodontis-mediated protection against diabetes in NOD mice is not dependent on the induction of a type 2 immune shift but does require TGF-β.  相似文献   

11.
Human type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease that results from the autoreactive destruction of pancreatic β cells by T cells. Antigen presenting cells including dendritic cells and macrophages are required to activate and suppress antigen-specific T cells. It has been suggested that antigen uptake from live cells by dendritic cells via scavenger receptor class A (SR-A) may be important. However, the role of SR-A in autoimmune disease is unknown. In this study, SR-A−/− nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice showed significant attenuation of insulitis, lower levels of insulin autoantibodies, and suppression of diabetes development compared with NOD mice. We also found that diabetes progression in SR-A−/− NOD mice treated with low-dose polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid (poly(I∶C)) was significantly accelerated compared with that in disease-resistant NOD mice treated with low-dose poly(I∶C). In addition, injection of high-dose poly(I∶C) to mimic an acute RNA virus infection significantly accelerated diabetes development in young SR-A−/− NOD mice compared with untreated SR-A−/− NOD mice. Pathogenic cells including CD4+CD25+ activated T cells were increased more in SR-A−/− NOD mice treated with poly(I∶C) than in untreated SR-A−/− NOD mice. These results suggested that viral infection might accelerate diabetes development even in diabetes-resistant subjects. In conclusion, our studies demonstrated that diabetes progression was suppressed in SR-A−/− NOD mice and that acceleration of diabetes development could be induced in young mice by poly(I∶C) treatment even in SR-A−/− NOD mice. These results suggest that SR-A on antigen presenting cells such as dendritic cells may play an unfavorable role in the steady state and a protective role in a mild infection. Our findings imply that SR-A may be an important target for improving therapeutic strategies for type 1 diabetes.  相似文献   

12.
CD1d-restricted invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells have diverse immune stimulatory/regulatory activities through their ability to release cytokines and to kill or transactivate other cells. Activation of iNKT cells can protect against multiple diseases in mice but clinical trials in humans have had limited impact. Clinical studies to date have targeted polyclonal mixtures of iNKT cells and we proposed that their subset compositions will influence therapeutic outcomes. We sorted and expanded iNKT cells from healthy donors and compared the phenotypes, cytotoxic activities and cytokine profiles of the CD4(+), CD8α(+) and CD4(-)CD8α(-) double-negative (DN) subsets. CD4(+) iNKT cells expanded more readily than CD8α(+) and DN iNKT cells upon mitogen stimulation. CD8α(+) and DN iNKT cells most frequently expressed CD56, CD161 and NKG2D and most potently killed CD1d(+) cell lines and primary leukemia cells. All iNKT subsets released Th1 (IFN-γ and TNF-α) and Th2 (IL-4, IL-5 and IL-13) cytokines. Relative amounts followed a CD8α>DN>CD4 pattern for Th1 and CD4>DN>CD8α for Th2. All iNKT subsets could simultaneously produce IFN-γ and IL-4, but single-positivity for IFN-γ or IL-4 was strikingly rare in CD4(+) and CD8α(+) fractions, respectively. Only CD4(+) iNKT cells produced IL-9 and IL-10; DN cells released IL-17; and none produced IL-22. All iNKT subsets upregulated CD40L upon glycolipid stimulation and induced IL-10 and IL-12 secretion by dendritic cells. Thus, subset composition of iNKT cells is a major determinant of function. Use of enriched CD8α(+), DN or CD4(+) iNKT cells may optimally harness the immunoregulatory properties of iNKT cells for treatment of disease.  相似文献   

13.
IL-18 is now identified as a pleiotropic cytokine that acts as a cofactor for both Th1 and Th2 cell development. Type 1 diabetes is considered a Th1-type autoimmune disease, and to date, the suppressive effect of exogenous IL-18 on the development of diabetes has been reported in 10-wk-old nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. In the present study we administered exogenous IL-18 systemically in 4-wk-old NOD mice using i.m. injection of the IL-18 expression plasmid DNA (pCAGGS-IL-18) with electroporation. Contrary to previous reports, the incidence of diabetes development was significantly increased in NOD mice injected with pCAGGS-IL-18 compared with that in control mice. Systemic and pancreatic cytokine profiles deviated to a Th1-dominant state, and the the frequency of glutamic acid decarboxylase-reactive IFN-gamma-producing CD4(+) cells was also high in the IL-18 group. Moreover, it was suggested that the promoting effect of IL-18 might be associated with increased peripheral IL-12, CD86, and pancreatic IFN-inducible protein-10 mRNA expression levels. In conclusion, we demonstrate here that IL-18 plays a promoting role as an enhancer of Th1-type immune responses in diabetes development early in the spontaneous disease process, which may contribute to elucidating the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes.  相似文献   

14.
Nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice spontaneously develop diabetes with a strong female prevalence; however, the mechanisms for this gender difference in susceptibility to T cell-mediated autoimmune diabetes are poorly understood. This investigation was initiated to find mechanisms by which sex hormones might affect the development of autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice. We examined the expression of IFN-gamma, a characteristic Th1 cytokine, and IL-4, a characteristic Th2 cytokine, in islet infiltrates of female and male NOD mice at various ages. We found that the most significant difference in cytokine production between sexes was during the early stages of insulitis at 4 wk of age. IFN-gamma was significantly higher in young females, whereas IL-4 was higher in young males. CD4(+) T cells isolated from lymph nodes of female mice and activated with anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 Abs produced more IFN-gamma, but less IL-4, as compared with males. Treatment of CD4(+) T cells with estrogen significantly increased, whereas testosterone treatment decreased the IL-12-induced production of IFN-gamma. We then examined whether the change in IL-12-induced IFN-gamma production by treatment with sex hormones was due to the regulation of STAT4 activation. We found that estrogen treatment increased the phosphorylation of STAT4 in IL-12-stimulated T cells. We conclude that the increased susceptibility of female NOD mice to the development of autoimmune diabetes could be due to the enhancement of the Th1 immune response through the increase of IL-12-induced STAT4 activation by estrogen.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Sulfatide-reactive type II NKT cells have been shown to regulate autoimmunity and anti-tumor immunity. Although, two major isoforms of sulfatide, C16:0 and C24:0, are enriched in the pancreas, their relative role in autoimmune diabetes is not known. Here, we report that sulfatide/CD1d-tetramer(+) cells accumulate in the draining pancreatic lymph nodes, and that treatment of NOD mice with sulfatide or C24:0 was more efficient than C16:0 in stimulating the NKT cell-mediated transfer of a delay in onset from T1D into NOD.Scid recipients. Using NOD.CD1d(-/-) mice, we show that this delay of T1D is CD1d-dependent. Interestingly, the latter delay or protection from T1D is associated with the enhanced secretion of IL-10 rather than IFN-g by C24:0-treated CD4(+) T cells and the deviation of the islet-reactive diabetogenic T cell response. Both C16:0 and C24:0 sulfatide isoforms are unable to activate and expand type I iNKT cells. Collectively, these data suggest that C24:0 stimulated type II NKT cells may regulate protection from T1D by activating DCs to secrete IL-10 and suppress the activation and expansion of type I iNKT cells and diabetogenic T cells. Our results raise the possibility that C24:0 may be used therapeutically to delay the onset and protect from T1D in humans.  相似文献   

17.
Nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice and some human type 1 diabetes (T1D) patients manifest low to high levels of other autoimmune pathologies. Skewing their cytokine production from a Th1 (primarily IFN-gamma) to a Th2 (primarily IL-4 and IL-10) pattern is a widely proposed approach to dampen the pathogenicity of autoreactive diabetogenic T cells. However, it is important that altered cytokine balances not enhance any other autoimmune proclivities to dangerous levels. Murine CD4 T cells are characterized by a reciprocal relationship between the production of IFN-gamma and expression of the beta-chain component of its receptor (IFN-gamma RB). Thus, NOD mice constitutively expressing a CD2 promoter-driven IFN-gamma RB transgene in all T cells are Th1-deficient. Unexpectedly, NOD.IFN-gamma RB Tg mice were found to develop a lethal early paralytic syndrome induced by a CD8 T cell-dependent autoimmune-mediated myositis. Furthermore, pancreatic insulitis levels were not diminished in 9-wk-old NOD.IFN-gamma RB Tg females, and overt T1D developed in the few that survived to an older age. Autoimmune-mediated myositis is only occasionally detected in standard NOD mice. Hence, some manipulations diminishing Th1 responses can bring to the forefront what are normally secondary autoimmune pathologies in NOD mice, while also failing to dependably abrogate pancreatic beta cell destruction. This should raise a cautionary note when considering the use of protocols that induce alterations in cytokine balances as a means of blocking progression to overt T1D in at-risk humans.  相似文献   

18.
Thiazolidinediones acting as PPAR-gamma agonists are a new generation of oral antidiabetics addressing insulin resistance as a main feature of type-2 diabetes. In accordance to our results, pre-clinical studies have demonstrated that the thiazolinedione troglitazone prevents the development of insulin-dependent autoimmune type-1 diabetes. To investigate whether TGZ acts by affecting the ICAM-1/LFA-1 pathway and/or the Th1/Th2 cytokine balance in NOD mice, we analysed the IL-1beta-induced ICAM-1 expression on islet-cells and the LFA-1, CD25, IL-2, IFN-gamma, IL-4, and IL-10 expression on splenocytes. After 200 days of oral TGZ administration, islet cells from TGZ-treated NOD mice showed a reduced ICAM-1 expression in response to the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1beta. The expression of the ligand LFA-1 on CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cells was comparable to that of placebo- and untreated controls. Also, the expression of Th1/Th2 cytokines was comparable in groups receiving TGZ or Placebo. Nevertheless, the investigated NOD mice segregated into IFN-gamma low- and IFN-gamma high producers as revealed by cluster analysis. Interestingly, the majority of TGZ-treated mice belonged to the cluster of IFN-gamma low producers. Thus, the prevention of autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice by TGZ seems to be associated with suppression of IL-1beta-induced ICAM-1 expression leading to a reduced vulnerability of pancreatic beta-cells during the effector stage of beta-cell destruction. In addition, IFN-gamma production was modulated, implicating that alteration of the Th1/Th2 cytokine balance might have contributed to diabetes prevention. The findings of this study suggest that TGZ exerts its effects by influencing both the beta-cells as the target of autoimmune beta-cell destruction and the T-cells as major effectors of the autoimmune process.  相似文献   

19.
A prominent subset of the hepatic innate immune system is alpha-galactosylceramide (alphaGalCer)-reactive, (CD4(+) and CD4(-)CD8(-)) CD1d-restricted NKT cells. We investigated in C57BL/6 (B6) mice which hepatic cell type stimulates hepatic NKT cell activation. Surface expression of CD1d but not CD40, CD80, or CD86 costimulator molecules was detected in hepatocytes. Pulsed in vitro or in vivo with alphaGalCer, hepatocytes triggered IL-4 release by liver NKT cells but required exogenous IL-12 to trigger IFN-gamma release by NKT cells. Liver dendritic cells (DC) isolated from nontreated mice showed low surface expression of MHC, CD1d, and CD40, CD80, or CD86 costimulator molecules that were strikingly up-regulated after alphaGalCer injection. Although liver CD11c(+) DC displayed lower CD1d surface expression than hepatocytes, they were potent stimulators of IFN-gamma and IL-4 release by liver NKT when pulsed with alphaGalCer in vitro or in vivo. Liver DC are thus potent stimulators of proinflammatory cytokine release by NKT cells, are activated themselves in the process of NKT cell activation, and express an activated phenotype after the NKT cell population is eliminated following alphaGalCer stimulation.  相似文献   

20.
Although P2rx7 has been proposed as a type 1 diabetes (T1D) susceptibility gene in NOD mice, its potential pathogenic role has not been directly determined. To test this possibility, we generated a new NOD stock deficient in P2X(7) receptors. T1D development was not altered by P2X(7) ablation. Previous studies found CD38 knockout (KO) NOD mice developed accelerated T1D partly because of a loss of CD4(+) invariant NKT (iNKT) cells and Foxp3(+) regulatory T cells (Tregs). These immunoregulatory T cell populations are highly sensitive to NAD-induced cell death activated by ADP ribosyltransferase-2 (ART2)-mediated ADP ribosylation of P2X(7) receptors. Therefore, we asked whether T1D acceleration was suppressed in a double-KO NOD stock lacking both P2X(7) and CD38 by rescuing CD4(+) iNKT cells and Tregs from NAD-induced cell death. We demonstrated that P2X(7) was required for T1D acceleration induced by CD38 deficiency. The CD38 KO-induced defects in homeostasis of CD4(+) iNKT cells and Tregs were corrected by coablation of P2X(7). T1D acceleration in CD38-deficient NOD mice also requires ART2 expression. If increased ADP ribosylation of P2X(7) in CD38-deficient NOD mice underlies disease acceleration, then a comparable T1D incidence should be induced by coablation of both CD38 and ART2, or CD38 and P2X(7). However, a previously established NOD stock deficient in both CD38 and ART2 expression is T1D resistant. This study demonstrated the presence of a T1D resistance gene closely linked to the ablated Cd38 allele in the previously reported NOD stock also lacking ART2, but not in the newly generated CD38/P2X(7) double-KO line.  相似文献   

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