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    Date Issued2004 (1)2001 (1)AuthorGreiner, Dale L. (2)Mordes, John P. (2)Rossini, Aldo A. (2)
    Weiser, Peter (2)
    Appel, Michael C. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Medicine, Diabetes Division (1)Department of Medicine, Division of Diabetes (1)Department of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism (1)Department of Pathology (1)Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (1)View MoreDocument TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordLife Sciences (2)Medicine and Health Sciences (2)Adoptive Transfer (1)Alleles; Animals; CD40 Ligand; Combined Modality Therapy; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1; Graft Survival; Immunotherapy; Islets of Langerhans Transplantation; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Inbred NOD; Transplantation, Homologous; Variation (Genetics) (1)Animals (1)View MoreJournalDiabetes (2)

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    Islet allograft survival induced by costimulation blockade in NOD mice is controlled by allelic variants of Idd3

    Pearson, Todd; Weiser, Peter; Markees, Thomas G.; Serreze, David V.; Wicker, Linda S.; Peterson, Laurence B.; Cumisky, Anne-Marie; Shultz, Leonard D.; Mordes, John P.; Rossini, Aldo A.; et al. (2004-07-28)
    NOD mice develop type 1 autoimmune diabetes and exhibit genetically dominant resistance to transplantation tolerance induction. These two phenotypes are genetically separable. Costimulation blockade fails to prolong skin allograft survival in (NOD x C57BL/6)F1 mice and in NOD-related strains made diabetes-resistant by congenic introduction of protective major histocompatibility complex (MHC) or non-MHC Idd region genes. Here, we tested the hypothesis that the genetic basis for the resistance of NOD mice to skin allograft tolerance also applies to islet allografts. Surprisingly, costimulation blockade induced permanent islet allograft survival in (NOD x C57BL/6)F1 mice but not in NOD mice. After costimulation blockade, islet allograft survival was prolonged in diabetes-resistant NOD.B6 Idd3 mice and shortened in diabetes-free C57BL/6 mice congenic for the NOD Idd3 variant. Islet allograft tolerance could not be induced in diabetes-resistant NOD.B10 Idd5 and NOD.B10 Idd9 mice. The data demonstrate that 1) NOD mice resist islet allograft tolerance induction; 2) unlike skin allografts, resistance to islet allograft tolerance is a genetically recessive trait; 3) an Idd3 region gene(s) is an important determinant of islet allograft tolerance induction; and 4) there may be overlap in the mechanism by which the Idd3 resistance locus improves self-tolerance and the induction of allotolerance.
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    BB rat thymocytes cultured in the presence of islets lose their ability to transfer autoimmune diabetes

    Whalen, Barbara J.; Marounek, Jan; Weiser, Peter; Appel, Michael C.; Greiner, Dale L.; Mordes, John P.; Rossini, Aldo A. (2001-05-04)
    Thymocytes from adult BB rats can adoptively transfer autoimmune diabetes to athymic recipients. It is also known that the development of BB rat T-cells is recapitulated in adult thymus organ cultures (ATOCs). Based on these observations, we tested the hypothesis that cells capable of the adoptive transfer of diabetes would be present in long-term ATOCs but could be rendered nondiabetogenic by co-culture with appropriate antigens. We observed that cells recovered from adult diabetes-resistant BB (BBDR) rat thymi cultured for up to 14 days can adoptively transfer disease to athymic WAG-rnu/rnu rats treated with polyinosinic: polycytidylic acid and a monoclonal antibody to preclude development of ART2a+ regulatory T-cells. Co-culture of adult BBDR thymi in the presence of BBDR thyrocytes had no effect on the ability of recovered cells to induce diabetes in 70-80% of adoptive recipients. In contrast, co-culture in the presence of islets prevented transfer of diabetes, on average, in >90% of recipients. Fresh islets, frozen islets, and islets pretreated with streptozotocin to deplete insulin were equally effective in preventing diabetes, but none prevented insulitis in nondiabetic recipients. Co-culture in the presence of islets was not associated with detectable alterations in phenotype or in the secretion of gamma-interferon or interleukin-4, either in cultures or in cells recovered from adoptive recipients. We conclude that islet antigens involved in the initiation of autoimmune diabetes in BB rats may be absent or deficient in BB rat thymi. Exposure of ATOCs to exogenous islets may lead to deletion or anergy of diabetogenic T-cells or to the positive selection of regulatory T-cells.
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