Thymectomy and Radiation-Induced Type 1 Diabetes in Nonlymphopenic BB Rats
- Sheela Ramanathan123,
- Marie-Therese Bihoreau4,
- Andrew D. Paterson5,
- Leili Marandi123,
- Dominique Gauguier4 and
- Philippe Poussier123
- 1Sunnybrook and Women’s College Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- 2Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- 3Department of Immunology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
- 4the Welcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, University of Oxford, Oxford, U.K.
- 5Program in Genetics and Genomics Biology, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Abstract
Spontaneous type 1 diabetes in BB rats is dependent on the RT1u MHC haplotype and homozygosity for an allele at the Lyp locus, which is responsible for a peripheral T-lymphopenia. Genetic studies have shown that there are other, as yet unidentified, genetic loci contributing to diabetes susceptibility in this strain. BB rats carrying wild-type Lyp alleles are not lymphopenic and are resistant to spontaneous diabetes (DR). Here we show that thymectomy and exposure to one sublethal dose of γ-irradiation (TX-R) at 4 weeks of age result in the rapid development of insulitis followed by diabetes in 100% of DR rats. Administration of CD4+45RC− T-cells from unmanipulated, syngeneic donors immediately after irradiation prevents the disease. Splenic T-cells from TX-R-induced diabetic animals adoptively transfer type 1 diabetes to T-deficient recipients. ACI, WF, WAG, BN, LEW, PVG, and PVG.RT1u strains are resistant to TX-R-induced insulitis/diabetes. Genetic analyses revealed linkage between regions on chromosomes 1, 3, 4, 6, 9, and 16, and TX-R-induced type 1 diabetes in a cohort of nonlymphopenic F2 (Wistar Furth × BBDP) animals. This novel model of TX-R-induced diabetes in nonlymphopenic BB rats can be used to identify environmental and cellular factors that are responsible for the initiation of antipancreatic autoimmunity.
Footnotes
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Philippe Poussier, Sunnybrook and Women’s Health Sciences Centre, 2075 Bayview Ave., Room A3 38, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4N 3M5. E-mail: ppoussie{at}sten.sunnybrook.utoronto.ca.
Received for publication 1 April 2002 and accepted in revised form 26 June 2002.
FACS, fluorescence-activated cell sorting; KRV, Kilham’s rat virus; mAb, monoclonal antibody; MNC, mononuclear cell; PE, phycoethrin; SPF, specific pathogen free; TX-R, γ-irradiation; VAF, virus antibody free.
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