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早年暴露于致糖尿病环境对非肥胖糖尿病小鼠1型糖尿病发展和B细胞激活的调节作用。

Regulation of type 1 diabetes development and B-cell activation in nonobese diabetic mice by early life exposure to a diabetogenic environment.

作者信息

De Riva Alessandra, Wållberg Maja, Ronchi Francesca, Coulson Richard, Sage Andrew, Thorne Lucy, Goodfellow Ian, McCoy Kathy D, Azuma Miyuki, Cooke Anne, Busch Robert

机构信息

Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.

Department of Pathology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2017 Aug 3;12(8):e0181964. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0181964. eCollection 2017.

Abstract

Microbes, including viruses, influence type 1 diabetes (T1D) development, but many such influences remain undefined. Previous work on underlying immune mechanisms has focussed on cytokines and T cells. Here, we compared two nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse colonies, NODlow and NODhigh, differing markedly in their cumulative T1D incidence (22% vs. 90% by 30 weeks in females). NODhigh mice harbored more complex intestinal microbiota, including several pathobionts; both colonies harbored segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB), thought to suppress T1D. Young NODhigh females had increased B-cell activation in their mesenteric lymph nodes. These phenotypes were transmissible. Co-housing of NODlow with NODhigh mice after weaning did not change T1D development, but T1D incidence was increased in female offspring of co-housed NODlow mice, which were exposed to the NODhigh environment both before and after weaning. These offspring also acquired microbiota and B-cell activation approaching those of NODhigh mice. In NODlow females, the low rate of T1D was unaffected by cyclophosphamide but increased by PD-L1 blockade. Thus, environmental exposures that are innocuous later in life may promote T1D progression if acquired early during immune development, possibly by altering B-cell activation and/or PD-L1 function. Moreover, T1D suppression in NOD mice by SFB may depend on the presence of other microbial influences. The complexity of microbial immune regulation revealed in this murine model may also be relevant to the environmental regulation of human T1D.

摘要

包括病毒在内的微生物会影响1型糖尿病(T1D)的发展,但许多此类影响仍不明确。先前关于潜在免疫机制的研究主要集中在细胞因子和T细胞上。在此,我们比较了两个非肥胖糖尿病(NOD)小鼠群体,即NODlow和NODhigh,它们的累积T1D发病率有显著差异(雌性在30周时分别为22%和90%)。NODhigh小鼠肠道微生物群更为复杂,包括几种致病共生菌;两个群体都含有分段丝状细菌(SFB),一般认为其可抑制T1D。幼年NODhigh雌性小鼠肠系膜淋巴结中的B细胞活化增加。这些表型是可传递的。断奶后将NODlow小鼠与NODhigh小鼠共同饲养并不会改变T1D的发展,但共同饲养的NODlow小鼠的雌性后代T1D发病率增加,这些后代在断奶前后都接触了NODhigh环境。这些后代还获得了与NODhigh小鼠相近的微生物群和B细胞活化。在NODlow雌性小鼠中,低T1D发病率不受环磷酰胺影响,但PD-L1阻断会使其增加。因此,如果在免疫发育早期获得某些环境暴露,即使这些暴露在生命后期是无害的,也可能会促进T1D的进展,这可能是通过改变B细胞活化和/或PD-L1功能实现的。此外,SFB对NOD小鼠T1D的抑制作用可能取决于其他微生物影响的存在。在这个小鼠模型中揭示的微生物免疫调节的复杂性可能也与人类T1D的环境调节有关。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/d2ee/5542673/6554e001b82c/pone.0181964.g001.jpg

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