4.7 Article

mt-Nd2 allele of the ALR/Lt mouse confers resistance against both chemically induced and autoimmune diabetes

Journal

DIABETOLOGIA
Volume 48, Issue 2, Pages 261-267

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00125-004-1644-8

Keywords

ALR mice; mitochondrial DNA; NADH dehydrogenase; NOD mice; T1D

Funding

  1. NIAID NIH HHS [AI056374] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDCD NIH HHS [DC04092, DC01402] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NIDDK NIH HHS [DK36175, DK27722, F32DK09865] Funding Source: Medline

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Aims/hypothesis: ALR/Lt, a mouse strain with strong resistance to type 1 diabetes, is closely related to autoimmune type 1 diabetes-prone NOD/Lt mice. ALR pancreatic beta cells are resistant to the beta cell toxin alloxan, combinations of cytotoxic cytokines, and diabetogenic NOD T-cell lines. Reciprocal F1 hybrids between either ALR and NOD or ALR and NON/Lt, showed that alloxan resistance was transmitted to F1 progeny only when ALR was the maternal parent. Here we show that the mitochondrial genome ( mtDNA) of ALR mice contributes resistance to diabetes. Methods: When F1 progeny from reciprocal outcrosses between ALR and NOD were backcrossed to NOD, a four-fold lower frequency of spontaneous type 1 diabetes development occurred when ALR contributed the mtDNA. Because of the apparent interaction between nuclear and mtDNA, the mitochondrial genomes were sequenced. Results: An ALR-specific sequence variation in the mt-Nd2 gene producing a leucine to methionine substitution at amino acid residue 276 in the NADH dehydrogenase 2 was discovered. An isoleucine to valine mutation in the mt-Co3 gene encoding COX3 distinguished ALR and NOD from NON and ALS. All four strains were distinguished by variation in a mt-encoded arginyl tRNA polyadenine tract. Shared alleles of mt-Co3 and mt-Tr comparing NOD and ALR allowed for exclusion of these two genes as candidates, implicating the mt-Nd2 variation as a potential ALR-derived type 1 diabetes protective gene. Conclusions/interpretation: The unusual resistance of ALR mice to both ROS-mediated and autoimmune type 1 diabete stresses reflects an interaction between the nuclear and mt genomes. The latter contribution is most likely via a single nucleotide polymorphism in mt-Nd2.

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