1 Autoimmunity/Diabetes Group, the John P. Robarts Research Institute, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada
2 Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada
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ABSTRACT |
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INTRODUCTION |
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Despite the importance of the MHC to the disease process, non-MHC genes also contribute to the breakdown of self-tolerance and development of type 1 diabetes (4). Although the nature of these non-MHC genes is not well-defined in the human disease, genetic analyses of NOD mice have revealed that several genes are involved. The identification of such genes may be expected to facilitate our understanding of the molecular basis of type 1 diabetes. For analyzing the genetic control of the development of type 1 diabetes in NOD mice, congenic mouse strains have been produced based on linkage mapping. Protection from disease in such strains provides evidence of the existence of individual Idd loci. To date, 19 non-MHCassociated susceptibility loci have been identified (Idd2-Idd12, Idd13a, Idd13b, and Idd14-Idd19) on 12 chromosomes through crosses of NOD mice with various diabetes-resistant strains (5). These loci act in a collective, recessive manner to determine development of insulitis as well as disease frequency and severity. Some of these have been mapped to specific chromosomal locations, although their products have not been identified (6,7).
Previously, we showed that thymic and peripheral T-cells from NOD mice exhibit a proliferative hyporesponsiveness (anergy) upon cross-linking of the T-cell receptor (TCR)/CD3 complex (8,9). This T-cell hyporesponsiveness is genetically inheritable and is mediated by the reduced secretion of both interleukin (IL)-2 and IL-4 (8,10,11) as well as a defect in the protein kinase C/Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase T-cell activation signaling pathway (9). Notably, there is an age-dependent correlation between the onset of this T-cell hyporesponsiveness and insulitis development in NOD mice, both of which persist until the onset of type 1 diabetes (10). On the basis of the hypothesis that a gene that regulates T-cell proliferation may affect type 1 diabetes susceptibility in NOD mice, we investigated the genetic control of this T-cell proliferative hyporesponsiveness trait. Our initial genome scan conducted by quantitative trait loci and genetic linkage analyses revealed that the control of NOD T-cell proliferative hyporesponsiveness genetically maps to a central region on mouse chromosome 11 that includes the Idd4 locus (12). In the present study, we extended this genetic mapping of Idd4 by generating and analyzing three novel congenic NOD.B6Idd4 mouse strains that display a profound resistance to diabetes. These analyses limit the Idd4 locus to a 5.2-cM region of chromosome 11 and raise the possibility that Idd4 may be split into two subloci, Idd4.1 and Idd4.2.
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RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS |
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For developing novel NOD.B6Idd4 congenic strains, (NOD x B6) (BXN) recombinant inbred mice previously generated between the parental B6 and NOD strains (12) were backcrossed three generations onto the NOD background. Mice were intercrossed to generate mice expressing different amounts of B6-derived chromosome 11 introgressed onto the NOD genetic background (Fig. 1). Genotyping was performed using the microsatellite markers D11NdsI, D11Mit38, and D11Mit325, which detect DNA polymorphisms on chromosome 11 between NOD and B6. Additional markers used to confirm the presence of NOD genes telomeric to Idd4 on chromosome 11 are shown in Table 1. The chromosomal positions of these markers were determined according to the most current map of mouse chromosome 11 (Mouse Genome Database, Mouse Genome Informatics, the Jackson Laboratory [online at http//www.informatics.jax.org]). These analyses narrowed the region of interest to a chromosomal distance of 5.2cM (from D11Nds1 to D11Mit38/325). For ensuring that Idd loci on chromosomes other than chromosome 11 are NOD in origin, the founding breeder pairs of each NOD congenic strain were genotyped for the Idd 110, 1215 microsatellite markers, as follows: D17Mit21 (Idd1); D9Nds3 (Idd2); D3Nds42, D3Nds43, D3Mit3, D3Mit10 (Idd3); D11Mit38 (Idd4); D1Mit3, D1Mit26 (Idd5); D6Mit15 (Idd6); D7Mit105 (Idd7); D4Mit59 (Idd8); D3Mit10 (Idd10); D4Mit11, D4Mit199 (Idd11); D14Mit61 (Idd12); D2Mit257 (Idd13); D13Mit61 (Idd14); and D5Mit48 (Idd15). By breeding congenic mice, we generated three NOD.B6Idd4 congenic mice strains on the NOD background containing
5.2 cM (from D11Nds1 to D11Mit38/D11Mit325) of the introgressed B6-derived Idd4 locus. Strain NOD.B6Idd4A carries the D11Nds1 and D11Mit38/325 intervals, strain NOD.B6Idd4B carries only D11Mit38/325, and strain NOD.B6Idd4C carries only D11Mit38 (Fig. 1). Mice of the desired genotype were intercrossed, and F4F6 generation pups were used for phenotypic analysis.
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DNA isolation and polymerase chain reaction amplification.
Genomic DNA was isolated from mice tail samples using the QIAamp Tissue Kit (Qiagen, Chatsworth, CA), and mouse genotyping was performed by polymerase chain reaction amplification (12).
Adoptive T-cell transfer.
Purified splenic T-cells isolated from 12-week-old female nondiabetic congenic mice and diabetic female NOD mice were transferred intraperitoneally (5 x 106 cells/recipient) to 6- to 8-week-old female NOD.Scid recipients (n = 1015 mice/group) (13). Alternatively, 2.5 x 106 purified splenic T-cells from nondiabetic congenic mice were co-transferred with diabetogenic NOD T-cells (2.5 x 106) into NOD.Scid recipients.
Histopathology analysis.
Pancreata were removed, fixed with 10% buffered formalin, embedded in paraffin, and sectioned at 5-µm intervals. The incidence and severity of insulitis and insulin immunostaining were analyzed as described (13). A minimum of 30 islets from each mouse were observed, and insulitis scores were determined blindly by two observers as follows: 0, normal; 1, peri-insulitis (mononuclear cells surrounding islets and ducts but no infiltration of the islet architecture); 2, moderate insulitis (mononuclear cells infiltrating, <50% of the islet architecture); and 3, severe insulitis (>50% of the islet tissue infiltrated by lymphocytes, accompanied by a reduction in insulin staining). Insulitis index (I) was calculated using the following formula: I = [(# islets with score of 0 x 0) + (# islets with score of 1 x 1) + (# islets with score of 2 x 2) + (# islets with score of 3 x 3)]/three x (total # islets).
T-cell proliferation.
Splenic T-cells were isolated (11) from 8- to 10-week-old female mice; cultured (106/ml) in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% heat-inactivated fetal calf serum, 10 mmol/l HEPES buffer, 1 mmol/l sodium pyruvate, 2 mmol/l L-glutamine, 100 units/ml penicillin, 0.1 mg/ml streptomycin, and 0.05 µmol/l 2-ME (Life Technologies, Burlington, Ontario, Canada); and stimulated with the plate-bound 1452C11 anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody (0.5 µg/ml; Cedarlane Laboratories, Hornby, Ontario, Canada). Cells were harvested after 72 h and were then assayed for the incorporation of [3H] thymidine (1 µCi/well; Amersham, Oakville, Ontario, Canada) added during the last 18 h of culture.
Cytokine production assays.
Culture supernatants collected after 72 h were assayed for T-cell cytokine production by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay as described (13).
Statistical analysis.
Results were compared using the Students t test for splenic T-cell proliferation and cytokine production. Insulitis scores were compared by 2 analysis. For analyses of cumulative diabetes frequencies, the Wilcoxons log rank test was used. Values with a P < 0.05 were considered to be significant.
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RESULTS |
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Insulitis in NOD.B6Idd4 mice.
Linkage analysis of the NOD genome revealed that there are two classes of non-MHC genes; the first consists of genes with disease resistance alleles that reduce the development of both insulitis and type 1 diabetes, and the second is composed of genes that prevent type 1 diabetes without reducing the amount of insulitis (6). To determine whether protection from type 1 diabetes in NOD.B6Idd4 mice correlates with a reduction of insulitis, we examined the pancreatic histology in the NOD.B6Idd4 congenic strains at different ages. NOD.B6Idd4A, NOD.B6Idd4B, and NOD.B6Idd4C mice were found to have similar percentages (>70%) of normal islets at 12 weeks of age and a significantly greater percentage than those in NOD mice (<50%; P < 0.05). However, at 2530 weeks of age, the insulitis scores in NOD.B6Idd4A mice are significantly lower (<10% infiltrated islets, I = 0.07) than those in NOD.B6Idd4B and NOD.B6Idd4C mice (<45% infiltrated islets, I = 0.30.4; P < 0.001) (Fig. 3). Note that the insulitis scores in NOD.B6Idd4B and NOD.B6Idd4C mice are significantly lower than those in NOD mice (>80% infiltrated islets, I > 0.5; P < 0.05). Histological analyses also showed that pancreatic islets from >25-week-old NOD.B6Idd4A (Fig. 4B) and NOD.B6Idd4C (Fig. 4C) mice have a much lower degree of islet infiltration than do NOD mice at this age (Fig. 4A). The patterns of infiltration in NOD.B6Idd4B mice (not shown) were similar to those in NOD.B6Idd4C mice in both age groups. Thus, the extent of islet infiltration in NOD.B6Idd4 mice is significantly decreased compared with that in NOD mice of similar age. These observations indicate that the region encompassing D11Nds1 and D11Mit38/325 also plays a critical role in the regulation of the severity of insulitis.
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Diabetogenic potential of splenic T-cells from NOD.B6Idd4 mice.
Adoptive transfer experiments conducted with recipient neonatal NOD, irradiated NOD, or immunodeficient NOD.Scid mice demonstrate the importance of splenic T-cells in the transfer of type 1 diabetes (14). To determine whether splenic T-cells from diabetes-resistant NOD.B6Idd4 mice have a reduced diabetogenic potential in NOD.Scid recipients, we performed adoptive transfer experiments. Splenic T-cells from either 12-week-old female nondiabetic NOD.B6Idd4 mice or diabetic female NOD mice were either transferred alone or co-transferred into NOD.Scid recipients. The onset of type 1 diabetes in recipients of co-transferred T-cells was not delayed significantly compared with that observed in recipients of transferred NOD T-cells (Fig. 5A). T-cells from NOD.B6Idd4 mice are unable to suppress the diabetogenicity of NOD-derived T-cells. However, the transfer of NOD.B6Idd4 T-cells alone yielded a reduced frequency (50%) of type 1 diabetes in NOD.Scid recipients at 70 days after transfer compared with recipients of NOD T-cells (80%; P < 0.01) (Fig. 5B). The age of onset of type 1 diabetes was delayed upon transfer of NOD.B6Idd4B T-cells, as type 1 diabetes was first detected at 55 days after transfer compared with 30 days after transfer for NOD T-cells (P < 0.05). Thus, genes encoded in the 5.2-cM fragment of chromosome 11 may influence the activation of effector T-cells involved in islet ß-cell destruction.
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Splenic T-cell proliferation and cytokine production in NOD.B6Idd4 mice.
The extent of TCR-stimulated T-cell proliferation was analyzed in NOD.B6Idd4 mice. The magnitude of T-cell proliferation in NOD.B6Idd4B and NOD.B6Idd4C mice is similar to that observed in B6 mice (P > 0.05) and was significantly higher than that detected in NOD and NOD.B6Idd4A mice (P < 0.01) (Fig. 6A). These data further confirm our previous report that NOD T-cell hyporesponsiveness to TCR stimulation cosegregates with the D11Mit38/D11Mit325 markers in Idd4 (12). Nonetheless, T-cell proliferative responses in NOD.B6Idd4A and NOD mice were very similar (P > 0.05).
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DISCUSSION |
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The incomplete protection from type 1 diabetes (1040% incidence) observed in NOD.B6Idd4 mice was not surprising, as the development of type 1 diabetes is under polygenic control and is dependent on epistatic interactions between different Idd loci. Studies with congenic mice have shown that some Idd loci genes have varying degrees of penetrance and do not singly confer a high degree of resistance to disease. For example, the incidence of type 1 diabetes is 25% in NOD.B10Idd3 mice (7), 40% in NOD.B10Idd10 (15) and NOD.B10Idd5 mice (16), and 7% in NOD.B10Idd9 mice (6). However, the incidence of type 1 diabetes varies between 3% and 7% in NOD.B6Idd3Idd10Idd18 and NOD.B6Idd3Idd10Idd17Idd18 mice (15), whereas type 1 diabetes does not develop in NOD.B6Idd3Idd10Idd17Idd18Idd9 mice (6). These results suggest that protection from type 1 diabetes is controlled by several loci and that these loci may function in a collective manner to determine the development of type 1 diabetes.
Previously, we demonstrated that a proliferative hyporesponsiveness occurs in TCR-stimulated NOD thymocytes and peripheral T-cells and that IL-4 and anti-CD28 treatments reverse NOD T-cell proliferative hyporesponsiveness in vitro and prevent the development of insulitis and type 1 diabetes in NOD mice in vivo (8,9,11,13,17). Our present analyses of NOD.B6Idd4 congenic mice suggest the presence of two types of Idd loci that regulate the development of type 1 diabetes in NOD mice. The first includes genes that prevent type 1 diabetes without the restoration of T-cell proliferative responsiveness, and the second includes genes that prevent type 1 diabetes when accompanied by the restoration of T-cell proliferative responsiveness. We propose that the latter two types of Idd loci be added to the two Idd loci reported by Wicker and colleagues (6) to mediate protection from islet ß-cell destruction by either reducing the number of islet-infiltrating cells or changing the cytokine profiles and pathogenic properties of islet-infiltrating cells.
The magnitude of the anti-CD3induced T-cell proliferative responses observed in NOD.B6Idd4B and NOD.B6Idd4C mice (expressing the B6 Idd4.2 locus) are identical to that of B6 T-cell responses. The latter two NOD.B6Idd4 congenic mice display less severe insulitis and a high degree of protection from type 1 diabetes compared with NOD. It follows that although T-cell hyporesponsiveness may correlate with the development of type 1 diabetes, this hyporesponsiveness phenotype may not be the single causal factor leading to the onset of type 1 diabetes, because NOD.B6Idd4A mice express this phenotype and yet are diabetes-resistant. T-cell hyporesponsiveness is presumably a polygenic trait manifested via pleiotropic, epistatic, and/or penetrance effects. The T-cell hyporesponsive phenotype observed in NOD.B6Idd4A mice is associated with reduced IL-2 and IFN- production and elevated IL-4 production, which would be expected to lead to significantly reduced insulitis and protection from type 1 diabetes (13). These findings suggest that diabetes resistance in NOD.B6Idd4A, NOD.B6Idd4B, and NOD.B6Idd4C mice may arise by different mechanisms. The differences in insulitis scores detected between NOD.B6Idd4A, NOD.B6Idd4B, and NOD.B6Idd4C mice seems to be associated with genes in the D11Nds1 region, which may significantly reduce insulitis and confer resistance to islet ß-cell destruction. Thus, albeit T-cell hyporesponsiveness can be associated with the development of type 1 diabetes, this association may be a necessary but not sufficient condition that elicits the onset of type 1 diabetes.
What candidate genes are found in the vicinity of Idd4? Although further fine-mapping of Idd4 is required, a number of candidate genes may be responsible for the phenotypes that we observed in the NOD.B6Idd4 congenic mice. The candidate genes in Idd4 may include platelet activating factor acetylhydrolase Ib1 (PAF-AHIb1) mapping at 44.0 cM, nitric oxide synthase-2 (NOS2) at 45.6 cM, and CC chemokines at 47.047.7 cM.
PAF-AH, a specific acetylhydrolase, can inhibit inflammatory responses by efficiently inactivating its substrate PAF (18). During inflammatory and allergic immune responses, PAF activates neutrophils, eosinophils, and macrophages, which may elicit microvascular leakage, vasodilation, smooth muscle contraction, and endothelial cell adhesion (19). It is interesting that levels of PAF in peripheral blood are elevated in type 1 diabetes but not type 2 diabetes patients, and PAF-AH activity is significantly decreased in the plasma of type 1 diabetes but not type 2 diabetes patients (20,21,22). PAF inhibitors can reduce insulitis and the frequency of type 1 diabetes in BB rats (23,24). Intraperitoneal injection of recombinant PAF-AH reduces the incidence of type 1 diabetes in DP-BB rats, and DP-BB rats protected from type 1 diabetes have a reduced severity of insulitis and an increased percentage of insulin-positive stained cells in pancreatic sections compared with that in diabetic rats (25). These results suggest that the elevated levels of PAF in type 1 diabetes could be due to a decrease in PAF acetylhydrolase activity. Thus, PAF-AHIb1 may be a candidate gene in the Idd4.1 interval that confers protection from insulitis and type 1 diabetes.
NOS2 encodes the inducible NOS enzyme, which is considered to be a candidate gene in autoimmune disorders because NO is known to play a pathogenic role in inflammatory responses (26,27). Inhibition of either NOS2 or NO activity and its by-products, such as peroxynitrite, results in the blocking or ameliorating disease symptoms in both type 1 diabetes and experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) (28). In addition, transgenic mice expressing mouse NOS2 cDNA under the control of the insulin promoter develop hypoinsulinemic diabetes by 4 weeks of age, and treatment with an inhibitor of NOS2 prevents/delays the development of type 1 diabetes (29). Accordingly, the production of NO by islet ß-cell NOS2 may play an important role in ß-cell destruction.
Chemokines mediate innate and adaptive immune responses by their ability to recruit, activate, and costimulate T-cells and monocytes (30,31). Macrophage inflammatory protein-l (MIP-l
), MIP-1ß, and monocyte chemotactic protein-l (MCP-1) are members of the CC family of chemokines that act primarily upon monocytes and T-cells (30,31,32), and they all are localized in the Idd4.2 interval. A role for CC chemokines, particularly MIP-l
, has been noted in experimental autoimmune diseases, such as EAE (33,34,35). Certain chemokines may be associated with predominant Th1 or Th2 cell responses, as evidenced by linkage of MIP-l
to a Th1 inflammatory response and of MCP-1 to a Th2 response (33,34,36). It is interesting that chemokines that promote the onset of type 1 diabetes are more abundant in islet-specific Th1 cells than Th2 cells (37). Recently, we found that MCP-1, MIP-1
, and MIP-1ß may control the development of insulitis in NOD mice (38). An increased MIP-1
toMIP-1ß ratio is associated with a greater severity of insulitis and more rapid progression to type 1 diabetes. Moreover, the incidence of destructive insulitis and type 1 diabetes is significantly reduced and delayed in MIP-1
deficient NOD.MIP-1
-/- mice compared with NOD.MIP-1
+/+ mice. IL-4 treatment of NOD mice elicits a high MIP-1
toMIP-1ß expression ratio in splenic T-cells and the pancreas. These data implicate MIP-1
as a proinflammatory chemokine in the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes (39). In contrast, our results are consistent with the hypothesis that MIP-1ß may have an anti-inflammatory role in type 1 diabetes, because the expression of MIP-1ß is upregulated in peripheral T-cells and pancreas of NOD mice protected from insulitis and type 1 diabetes by IL-4 treatment (13). MIP-1
can also affect T-cell selection and/or maturation, because it is expressed in the thymic cortex and is an inhibitor of hematopoietic stem cell development (40). Taken together, our data suggest that a CC chemokine gene(s) in Idd4.2 may control the magnitude of T-cell proliferation and susceptibility to type 1 diabetes in NOD mice.
It is interesting that Idd4 colocalizes with the Eae7 and autoimmune orchitis resistance 3 (Orch3) loci on chromosome 11 (41). We suggest that Idd4, Eae7, and Orch3 are susceptibility loci that regulate various autoimmune diseases. Furthermore, an association between Idd4 and loci that control susceptibility to systemic lupus erythematosus in (NZB x NZW) mice has been reported (42). Also, previous quantitative trait loci analyses conducted using F1/F2 outcrosses between inbred NON/Lt (nonobese, nondiabetic) and NZO/HI (New Zealand obese) mice revealed a linkage of type 2 diabetes susceptibility to D11Mit41 at the position of 49 cM in chromosome 11. Mice with an NZO-derived allele at this marker display low levels of serum immunoreactive insulin (43). Note that Idd3 on chromosome 3 mediates protection from both type 1 diabetes and EAE (44). These findings raise the possibility that non-MHC susceptibility genes may be divided into two broad classes: the first class genetically controls susceptibility to several autoimmune diseases, and the second class regulates susceptibility to a specific autoimmune disease.
In conclusion, we limited the Idd4 locus to a 5.2-cM interval on mouse chromosome 11. Congenic mapping analyses shows that at least two subloci, Idd4.1 and Idd4.2, may confer diabetes resistance. Idd4.1 maps close to the D11Nds1 interval and is associated with reduced insulitis and protection from diabetes. Idd4.2 maps close to the D11Mit38/325 interval, is associated with a normal level of T-cell proliferative responsiveness, and confers protection against type 1 diabetes. Three sets of candidate genes, PAF-AH, NOS2, and a CC chemokine gene(s), are localized in the 5.2-cM interval. Additional fine mapping of this region and characterization of these loci and genes are required to further elucidate the mechanisms involved in the genetic control of diabetes resistance by Idd4.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank David Goodale for expert animal care, Mitchel Sivilotti for assistance with blood glucose monitoring and genotyping of mice, Bibi Pettypiece for assistance with preparation of this manuscript, and all members of our laboratory for advice and encouragement.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Received for publication 27 March 2001 and accepted in revised form 12 October 2001.
M.G. and Q.-S.M. contributed equally to this work.
AH, acetylhydrolase; EAE, experimental allergic encephalomyelitis; IFN-,
-interferon; IL, interleukin; MCP, monocyte chemotactic protein; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; MIP, macrophage inflammatory protein; NOS-2, nitric oxide synthase-2; Orch, autoimmune orchitis resistance; PAF, platelet activating factor; TCR, T-cell receptor.
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REFERENCES |
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