4.7 Article

Unexpected Acceleration of Type 1 Diabetes by Transgenic Expression of B7-H1 in NOD Mouse Peri-Islet Glia

Journal

DIABETES
Volume 59, Issue 10, Pages 2588-2596

Publisher

AMER DIABETES ASSOC
DOI: 10.2337/db09-1209

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

OBJECTIVE-Autoimmune target tissues in type 1 diabetes include pancreatic beta-cells and pen-islet Schwann cells (pSC)-the latter active participants or passive bystanders in pre-diabetic autoimmune progression. To distinguish between these alternatives, we sought to suppress pSC autoinununity by transgenic expression of the negative costimulatory molecule B7-H1 in NOD pSC. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS-A B7-H1 transgene was placed under control of the glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) promoter. Transgenic and wild-type NOD mice were compared for transgene PD-1 affinities, diabetes development, insulitis, and pSC survival. Mechanistic studies included adoptive type 1 diabetes transfer, B7-H1 blockade, and T-cell autoreactivity and sublineage distribution. RESULTS-Transgenic and endogenous B7-H1 bound PD-1 with equal affinities. Unexpectedly, the transgene generated islet-selective CD8(+) bias with accelerated rather than suppressed diabetes progression. T-cells of diabetic transgenics transferred type 1 diabetes faster. There were no earlier pSC losses due to conceivable transgene toxicity, but transgenic pSC loss was enhanced by 8 weeks, preceded by elevated GFAP autoreactivity, with high-affinity T-cells targeting the major NOD K-d-GFAP epitope, p253-261. FoxP3(+) regulatory T- and CD11c(+) dendritic cell pools were unaffected. CONCLUSIONS-In contrast with transgenic B7-H1 in NOD mouse beta-cells, transgenic B7-H1 in pSC promotes rather than protects from type 1 diabetes. Here, ectopic B7-H1 enhanced the pathogenicity of effector T-cells, demonstrating that pSC can actively impact diabetes progression-likely through modification of intraislet T-cell selection. Although pSC cells emerge as a new candidate for therapeutic targets, caution is warranted with regard to the B7-H1-PD1 axis, where B7-H1 overexpression can lead to accelerated autoimmune disease. Diabetes 59:2588-2596, 2010

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available