4.8 Article

Tolerance to Proinsulin-1 Reduces Autoimmune Diabetes in NOD Mice

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.645817

Keywords

type 1 diabetes; proinsulin-1; CD4+T cells; immune tolerance; NOD mice

Categories

Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [GNT1037321, GNT1150425]
  2. Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation
  3. Operational Infrastructure Support Scheme of the Government of Victoria

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T-cell responses to insulin and proinsulin play a central role in islet autoimmunity in humans and NOD mice. Knockout of proinsulin-1 can protect NOD mice from autoimmune diabetes, while transgenic NOD mice with regulated proinsulin-1 expression display reduced incidence of spontaneous diabetes. Boosting immune tolerance to proinsulin-1 partially prevents islet autoimmunity in NOD mice, with minimal impact on responses to other antigens.
T-cell responses to insulin and its precursor proinsulin are central to islet autoimmunity in humans and non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice that spontaneously develop autoimmune diabetes. Mice have two proinsulin genes proinsulin -1 and 2 that are differentially expressed, with predominant proinsulin-2 expression in the thymus and proinsulin-1 in islet beta-cells. In contrast to proinsulin-2, proinsulin-1 knockout NOD mice are protected from autoimmune diabetes. This indicates that proinsulin-1 epitopes in beta-cells maybe preferentially targeted by autoreactive T cells. To study the contribution of proinsulin-1 reactive T cells in autoimmune diabetes, we generated transgenic NOD mice with tetracycline-regulated expression of proinsulin-1 in antigen presenting cells (TIP-1 mice) with an aim to induce immune tolerance. TIP-1 mice displayed a significantly reduced incidence of spontaneous diabetes, which was associated with reduced severity of insulitis and insulin autoantibody development. Antigen experienced proinsulin specific T cells were significantly reduced in in TIP-1 mice indicating immune tolerance. Moreover, T cells from TIP-1 mice expressing proinsulin-1 transferred diabetes at a significantly reduced frequency. However, proinsulin-1 expression in APCs had minimal impact on the immune responses to the downstream antigen islet-specific glucose-6-phosphatase catalytic subunit-related protein (IGRP) and did not prevent diabetes in NOD 8.3 mice with a pre-existing repertoire of IGRP reactive T cells. Thus, boosting immune tolerance to proinsulin-1 partially prevents islet-autoimmunity. This study further extends the previously established role of proinsulin-1 epitopes in autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice.

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