NKT cells and IFN-gamma establish the regulatory environment for the control of diabetogenic T cells in the nonobese diabetic mouse |
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Authors: | Cain Judith A Smith Judith A Ondr Jennifer K Wang Bo Katz Jonathan D |
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Affiliation: | Diabetes Research Center, Cincinnati Children's Research Foundation, OH 45229, USA. |
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Abstract: | In type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), T cell-mediated destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells leads to the acute onset of hyperglycemia. The nonobese diabetic mouse model of human T1DM reveals that T cells capable of inducing diabetes can escape normal central tolerance, and can cause T1DM if left unchecked. However, several regulatory T cell subsets can temper autoaggressive T cells, although it remains undetermined when and how, and by which subset, homeostatic control of diabetogenic T cells is normally achieved in vivo. Using a cotransfer model, we find that NKT cells efficiently dampen the action of diabetogenic CD4+ T cells, and do so in an indirect manner by modifying the host environment. Moreover, the NKT cell-containing population modifies the host via production of IFN-gamma that is necessary for driving the inhibition of diabetogenic T cells in vivo. |
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