1 The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine
2 University of Pittsburgh, Department of Pediatrics, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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ABSTRACT |
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Full understanding of the genetic susceptibilities predisposing to type 1 diabetes is complicated by the fact that, in addition to "high-risk" HLA-DR and -DQ class II alleles, susceptible individuals must also inherit variable numbers of nonmajor histocompatibility complex (MHC) susceptibility contributors (1). Adding to this complexity, extended haplotype analysis of the HLA indicates the presence of additional type 1 diabetes susceptibility components in linkage disequilibrium with the high-risk class II alleles (2).
The immunogenetics of type 1 diabetes in NOD mice provides valuable insight into the multigenic contributions of the MHC and closely linked genes on mouse chromosome (Chr.) 17. The diabetogenicity associated with the H2g7 haplotype of type 1 diabetesprone NOD mice is collectively referred to as Idd1. This includes expression on antigen-presenting cells of the H2-Abg7 product (HLA-DQ8 subunit ortholog) and the lack of expression of an H2-Eab gene product (HLA-DR subunit ortholog). Class I alleles marking each end of the H2 complex, the common H2-Kd allele proximally and H2-Db allele distally, are also essential for diabetogenic targeting by CD8+ T-cells. Their pathogenic potential can be epistatically modified by altering the ß-2 microglobulin (B2m) gene product that pairs with them (3). The complex nature of H2g7 susceptibility was first indicated by analysis of the cataract Shionogi (CTS)/Shi MHC, which suggests that Idd1 comprised more than the class II alleles. The CTS/Shi strain was also derived from the Jcl:ICR (Institute for Cancer Research) outbred progenitors that originated the NOD/Shi strain. These two strains share identical class II alleles. However, serotyping suggested that both class I alleles were unique (4,5). Indeed, the H2-D allele in a CTS/Shi substrain sent to E.H.L. has previously been shown to be H2-Ddx by cDNA sequencing (6). H2-Ddx represents a rare allele shared with the related alloxan resistant (ALR)/Lt strain (7). Both the ALR/Lt and the CTS/ShiLt substrain at The Jackson Laboratory showed a cDNA sequence identical to the H2-Kd class I allele expressed in NOD/Lt (6). However, sequencing of the H2-K allele in genomic DNA of CTS/Shi mice from the source colony in Japan revealed two amino acid differences (in a region uninvolved with antigen binding or presentation) between the CTS/Shi allele and the H2-Kd allele expressed by NOD/Shi (8). The reason for the discrepancy in H2-K gene sequences between the two colonies was assumed to represent substrain divergence (8).
Congenic transfer in Japan of the CTS/Shi MHC onto the NOD/Shi genetic background significantly reduced diabetes frequency and delayed time of onset (9). This resistance locus, provisionally designated Idd16, was not fine mapped but resided within a congenic segment extending 7.6 cM proximally and 3.4 cM distally from H2. Evidence suggesting that the CTS-defined Idd16 locus might be proximal to H2-Kd came from three sources. First, outcross of NOD/Lt with ALR/Lt identified an MHC-linked ALR resistance locus with peak linkage just proximal to H2-K (10). Subcongenic analysis of NOD stocks carrying segments of Chr. 17 from C3H-H2R209 identified one new intra-H2 resistance allele between Lmp2 and H2-K and two additional resistance contributions proximal to H2-K (11). More recently, NOD interval-specific Chr. 17 congenic stocks generated by outcross of NOD with C57BL/6 (B6, H2b haplotype) also sited B6-derived resistance alleles proximal and distal to H2-K (12,13). Although the authors inferred that one of the proximal resistance loci was the CTS Idd16 resistance locus, comparative CTS/B6 sequence data in the region was not reported.
We outcrossed NOD/Lt and ALR/Lt mice and produced NOD stocks congenic for specific intervals of the H2gx complex shared in common between ALR/Lt and CTS/ShiLt. Figure 1 shows the three interval-specific congenic stocks selected by screening for recombinations within the longest interval congenic stock (now designated D.R1) between N7 and N10 of backcrossing to NOD/Lt. All three stocks appeared identical in containing a short interval (0.41-mB minimum length to <2.15-mB maximum length) of ALR-derived alleles extending proximally from the common NOD/ALR H2-K allele to the polymorphic D17Mit16 marker. The differences identified in the three stocks were all distal to the MHC class II and class III region alleles common to NOD and ALR. Two of these carried the entire ALR/Lt H2gx haplotype (Fig. 1, D.R1 and D.R2) but differed in the amount of ALR genome carried below the H2-Ddx marker. D.R1 carried the longest distal congenic segment (Fig. 1), extending beneath the shared NOD/ALR class II/class III region from D17Mit13 at 33.57 mB through D17Mit10 (the recombination falling somewhere between D17Mit10 at 45.7 mB and D17Mit9 at 49.3 mB). A shorter (minimum 1.61 mB) congenic stock, designated D.R2, considerably reduced this distal segment to contain ALR alleles only from D17Mit13 through H2-D (Fig. 1). An even shorter (<7.33 mB) interval-specific congenic stock, designated D.R3 (Fig. 1), was obtained by identification of an intra-H2 recombinant wherein a very small segment of ALR/Lt genome was retained distally only around the D17Mit13 marker. In this stock, the ALR H2-Ddx allele and all genome distal to it were replaced by NOD-derived alleles.
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The original segregation analysis for Idd loci, distinguishing NOD/Lt from the strongly diabetes-resistant ALR/Lt strain, identified a resistance contribution with peak linkage at D17Mit16 just proximal to the common H2-Kd allele (10). This was the same region where a B6 H2-Kblinked resistance locus was also mapped and designated Idd16 (12). The B6 H2blinked proximal component of Idd16 differed from that produced by the ALR/Lt (and CTS/Shi) H2-linked distal component in its ability to completely suppress clinical disease (but not insulitis). In contrast, the distal Idd16 component defined by the ALR MHC containing intervals in the D.R1 and D.R2 congenic stocks retarded but did not completely suppress diabetogenesis. Thus, what is currently termed as Idd16 in the literature and defined by outcross with either B6 or CTS/Shi appears to comprise distinct H2-linked resistance at both ends of the MHC. Under these circumstances, we refer to the ALR/CTS-defined distal linkage as Idd16.1 (because Idd16 was first defined by the CTS MHC linkage) and the B6-defined proximal linkage as Idd16.2.
This B6-defined Idd16.2 locus was mapped to a short interval just above D17Mit16. The same marker was linked with the highest ALR-contributed resistance on Chr. 17 to spontaneous type 1 diabetes development in backcross analyses (10). Because all three of our ALR-derived DR congenic intervals extended proximally only to the D17Mit16 marker, we could not assess potential resistance contributions in an Idd16.2 interval proximal to it or in the immediate vicinity of the H2-Kd allele shared by the H2gx and H2g7 haplotypes. However, given the results obtained by outcross with NOD-unrelated strains clearly showing resistance contributions just proximal to the MHC, it is entirely possible that similarly acting loci are present in the ALR/Lt and CTS/ShiLt strains.
In conclusion, we have demonstrated by interval-specific congenic analysis a type 1 diabetes resistance allele, provisionally designated Idd16.1, to be tightly linked to the distal end of the H2gx haplotype expressed by ALR/Lt and CTS/ShiLt mice. The MHC class I H2-Ddx gene itself represents a strong Idd16.2 candidate.
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RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS |
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MHC congenics and incidence studies.
NOD/Lt and ALR/Lt mice were selected for specific H2gx and H2g7 congenic regions, respectively, by PCR genotyping with polymorphic Massachusetts Institute of Technology microsatellite markers and by flow cytometric typing for H2-Db versus H2-Ddx expression (mAb 28-24-8 and mAb 34-2-12, respectively; Pharmingen, San Diego, CA). Following outcross and nine backcrosses (N10) to NOD/Lt with selection for polymorphic H2gx-linked markers introgressed into NOD/Lt, MHC heterozygous mice were intercrossed and inbreeding initiated to produce cohorts of mice homozygous for ALR markers across the intervals shown in Fig. 1. The D.R2 and D.R3 congenics were derived from recombinations within the D.R1 interval between N7N10. Mice were typed for NOD homozygosity at the non-MHC loci on Chrs. 3 and 8 where ALR alleles contributed to diabetes resistance (10).
Incidence studies consisted of mice homozygous for the congenic segment of Chr. 17 mice and mice homozygous for NOD alleles through the interval. Males and females of each genotype in each strain were weaned at 4 weeks of age and started in an incidence study at 10 weeks of age. Each mouse was checked for diabetes using Diastix (kind gift of Bayer, Elkhart, IN) weekly between 1040 weeks and was considered diabetic after two consecutive positive tests. Significance of differences in diabetes-free lifespan was estimated by Kaplan-Meier survival analysis using the StatView program (Abacus Concepts, Berkeley, CA).
Insulitis scoring.
Insulitis was assessed histologically in a small group of nondiabetic males at 8 weeks of age and in nondiabetic D.R1 and D.R2 male and female incidence survivors at 40 weeks. Pancreata were fixed in Bouins solution, stained with aldehyde fuchsin, and scored for insulitis. Scores were given for each islet beginning with 0 for no leukocytes in islet periphery, 1 for peri-insulitis, 2 for leukocyte penetration into <25% of the islet, 3 for leukocyte destruction of >25% of islet, and 4 for end-stage insulitis.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Pam Stanley, Elsie Cough, Peter Reifsnyder, and Jason Beckwith for their technical assistance and Dr. Robert Graser for initiating the cross.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Edward H. Leiter, The Jackson Laboratory, 600 Main St, Bar Harbor, ME 04609. E-mail: ehl{at}jax.org
Received for publication November 12, 2004 and accepted in revised form February 16, 2005
ALR, alloxan resistant; CTS, cataract Shionogi; MHC, major histocompatibility complex
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REFERENCES |
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