Inoue Yoshihiro, Kaifu Tomonori, Sugahara-Tobinai Akiko, Nakamura Akira, Miyazaki Jun-Ichi, Takai Toshiyuki
Department of Experimental Immunology, Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan.
J Immunol. 2007 Jul 15;179(2):764-74. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.179.2.764.
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D) in humans is an organ-specific autoimmune disease in which pancreatic islet beta cells are ruptured by autoreactive T cells. NOD mice, the most commonly used animal model of T1D, show early infiltration of leukocytes in the islets (insulitis), resulting in islet destruction and diabetes later. NOD mice produce various islet beta cell-specific autoantibodies, although it remains a subject of debate regarding whether these autoantibodies contribute to the development of T1D. Fc gammaRs are multipotent molecules that play important roles in Ab-mediated regulatory as well as effector functions in autoimmune diseases. To investigate the possible role of Fc gammaRs in NOD mice, we generated several Fc gammaR-less NOD lines, namely FcR common gamma-chain (Fc Rgamma)-deficient (NOD.gamma(-/-)), Fc gammaRIII-deficient (NOD.III(-/-)), Fc gammaRIIB-deficient (NOD.IIB(-/-)), and both Fc Rgamma and Fc gammaRIIB-deficient NOD (NOD.null) mice. In this study, we show significant protection from diabetes in NOD.gamma(-/-), NOD.III(-/-), and NOD.null, but not in NOD.IIB(-/-) mice even with grossly comparable production of autoantibodies among them. Insulitis in NOD.gamma(-/-) mice was also alleviated. Adoptive transfer of bone marrow-derived dendritic cells or NK cells from NOD mice rendered NOD.gamma(-/-) animals more susceptible to diabetes, suggesting a possible scenario in which activating Fc gammaRs on dendritic cells enhance autoantigen presentation leading to the activation of autoreactive T cells, and Fc gammaRIII on NK cells trigger Ab-dependent effector functions and inflammation. These findings highlight the critical roles of activating Fc gammaRs in the development of T1D, and indicate that Fc gammaRs are novel targets for therapies for T1D.
人类1型糖尿病(T1D)是一种器官特异性自身免疫性疾病,其中胰腺胰岛β细胞被自身反应性T细胞破坏。非肥胖糖尿病(NOD)小鼠是最常用的T1D动物模型,其胰岛中白细胞早期浸润(胰岛炎),随后导致胰岛破坏和糖尿病。NOD小鼠产生多种胰岛β细胞特异性自身抗体,尽管这些自身抗体是否促成T1D的发展仍存在争议。FcγR是多能分子,在自身免疫性疾病的抗体介导的调节以及效应功能中起重要作用。为了研究FcγR在NOD小鼠中的可能作用,我们构建了几个缺乏FcγR的NOD品系,即缺乏FcR共同γ链(FcRγ)的(NOD.γ(-/-))、缺乏FcγRIII的(NOD.III(-/-))、缺乏FcγRIIB的(NOD.IIB(-/-))以及同时缺乏FcRγ和FcγRIIB的NOD(NOD.null)小鼠。在本研究中,我们发现NOD.γ(-/-)、NOD.III(-/-)和NOD.null小鼠对糖尿病有显著的保护作用,而NOD.IIB(-/-)小鼠即使它们之间自身抗体产生量大致相当也没有这种保护作用。NOD.γ(-/-)小鼠的胰岛炎也得到缓解。将NOD小鼠骨髓来源的树突状细胞或自然杀伤细胞过继转移给NOD.γ(-/-)动物,使其对糖尿病更易感,这表明可能存在这样一种情况,即激活树突状细胞上的FcγR会增强自身抗原呈递,导致自身反应性T细胞活化,而自然杀伤细胞上的FcγRIII触发抗体依赖性效应功能和炎症。这些发现突出了激活FcγR在T1D发展中的关键作用,并表明FcγR是T1D治疗的新靶点。