Wicker L S, Appel M C, Dotta F, Pressey A, Miller B J, DeLarato N H, Fischer P A, Boltz R C, Peterson L B
Department of Autoimmune Diseases Research, Merck Research Laboratories, Rahway, New Jersey 07065.
J Exp Med. 1992 Jul 1;176(1):67-77. doi: 10.1084/jem.176.1.67.
The development of autoimmune diabetes in the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse is controlled by multiple genes. At least one diabetogenic gene is linked to the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) of the NOD and is most likely represented by the two genes encoding the alpha and beta chains of the unique NOD class II molecule. Three other diabetogenic loci have recently been identified in the NOD mouse and are located on chromosomes 1, 3, and 11. In addition to the autoimmune diabetes which is caused by destruction of the insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas, other manifestations of autoimmunity are seen in the NOD mouse. These include mononuclear cell inflammation of the submandibular and lacrimal glands, as well as the presence of circulating autoantibodies. To determine the effect of the non-MHC diabetogenic genes on the development of autoimmunity, we constructed the NOD.B10-H-2b (NOD.H-2b) strain, which possesses the non-MHC diabetogenic genes from the NOD mouse, but derives its MHC from the C57BL/10 (B10) strain. The NOD.H-2b strain does not develop insulitis, cyclophosphamide-induced diabetes, or spontaneous diabetes. It does, however, develop extensive lymphocytic infiltrates in the pancreas and the submandibular glands that are primarily composed of Thy 1.2+ T cells and B220+ B cells. In addition, autoantibodies are present in NOD.H-2b mice which recognize the "polar antigen" on the insulin-secreting rat tumor line RINm38. These observations demonstrate that the non-MHC genes in the NOD strain, in the absence of the NOD MHC, significantly contribute to the development of autoimmunity. The contribution of a single dose of the NOD MHC to autoimmunity was assessed with a (NOD x NOD.H-2b)F1 cross. Although only approximately 3% of F1 females developed spontaneous diabetes, approximately 50% of both female and male F1 mice developed insulitis, and 25% of females and 17% of males became diabetic after treatment with cyclophosphamide. These data demonstrate that the MHC-linked diabetogenic genes of the NOD mouse are dominant with decreasing levels of penetrance for the following phenotypes: insulitis greater than cyclophosphamide-induced diabetes greater than spontaneous diabetes.
非肥胖型糖尿病(NOD)小鼠自身免疫性糖尿病的发展受多个基因控制。至少有一个致糖尿病基因与NOD的主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)相关联,最有可能由编码独特的NOD II类分子α链和β链的两个基因代表。最近在NOD小鼠中又鉴定出另外三个致糖尿病位点,分别位于1号、3号和11号染色体上。除了由胰腺中产生胰岛素的β细胞破坏引起的自身免疫性糖尿病外,在NOD小鼠中还可见到其他自身免疫表现。这些表现包括颌下腺和泪腺的单核细胞炎症,以及循环自身抗体的存在。为了确定非MHC致糖尿病基因对自身免疫发展的影响,我们构建了NOD.B10-H-2b(NOD.H-2b)品系,该品系拥有来自NOD小鼠的非MHC致糖尿病基因,但其MHC来自C57BL/10(B10)品系。NOD.H-2b品系不会发生胰岛炎、环磷酰胺诱导的糖尿病或自发性糖尿病。然而,它确实会在胰腺和颌下腺中出现广泛的淋巴细胞浸润,这些浸润主要由Thy 1.2+ T细胞和B220+ B细胞组成。此外,NOD.H-2b小鼠体内存在识别胰岛素分泌大鼠肿瘤细胞系RINm38上“极性抗原”的自身抗体。这些观察结果表明,在没有NOD MHC的情况下,NOD品系中的非MHC基因对自身免疫的发展有显著贡献。通过(NOD×NOD.H-2b)F1杂交评估了单剂量NOD MHC对自身免疫的贡献。虽然只有约3%的F1雌性小鼠发生自发性糖尿病,但约50%的F1雌性和雄性小鼠发生胰岛炎, 25%的雌性和17%的雄性小鼠在接受环磷酰胺治疗后发生糖尿病。这些数据表明,NOD小鼠中与MHC相关的致糖尿病基因具有显性,对以下表型的外显率水平逐渐降低:胰岛炎大于环磷酰胺诱导的糖尿病大于自发性糖尿病。