B lymphocytes are essential for the initiation of T cell-mediated autoimmune diabetes: analysis of a new "speed congenic" stock of NOD.Ig mu null mice.

David Serreze(Jackson Laboratory), H.D. Chapman(Jackson Laboratory), Don S. Varnum(Jackson Laboratory), Matthew S. Hanson(Jackson Laboratory), Peter C. Reifsnyder(Jackson Laboratory), Scott D. Richard(Jackson Laboratory), Sara Fleming(Jackson Laboratory), Edward H. Leiter(Jackson Laboratory), Leonard D. Shultz(Jackson Laboratory)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
November 1, 1996
Cited by 586Open Access
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Abstract

The T lymphocytes mediating autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta cells in the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse model of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) may be generated due to functional defects in hematopoietically derived antigen-presenting cells (APC). However, it has not been clear which particular subpopulations of APC (B lymphocytes, macrophages, and dendritic cells) contribute to the development and activation of diabetogenic T cells in NOD mice. In the current study we utilized a functionally inactivated immunoglobulin (Ig) mu allele (Ig mu null) to generate a "speed congenic" stock of B lymphocyte-deficient NOD mice that are fixed for linkage markers delineating previously identified diabetes susceptibility (Idd) genes. These B lymphocyte NOD.Ig mu null mice had normal numbers of T cells but were free of overt IDDM and insulitis resistant, while the frequency of disease in the B lymphocyte intact segregants was equivalent to that of standard NOD mice in our colony. Thus, B lymphocytes play a heretofore unrecognized role that is essential for the initial development and/or activation of beta cell autoreactive T cells in NOD mice.


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