The iddm4 Locus Segregates With Diabetes Susceptibility in Congenic WF.iddm4 Rats

  1. John P. Mordes1,
  2. Jean Leif1,
  3. Stephen Novak2,
  4. Cheryl DeScipio2,
  5. Dale L. Greiner1 and
  6. Elizabeth P. Blankenhorn2
  1. 1Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts
  2. 2Department of Microbiology and Immunology, MCP Hahnemann University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

    Abstract

    Viral antibody–free BBDR and WF rats never develop spontaneous diabetes. BBDR rats, however, develop autoimmune diabetes after perturbation of the immune system, e.g., by viral infection. We previously identified a disease-susceptibility locus in the BBDR rat, iddm4, which is associated with the development of autoimmune diabetes after treatment with polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid and an antibody that depletes ART2+ regulatory cells. We have now developed lines of congenic WF.iddm4 rats and report that in an intercross of N5 generation WF.iddm4 rats, ∼70% of animals either homozygous or heterozygous for the BBDR origin allele of iddm4 became hyperglycemic after treatment to induce diabetes. Fewer than 20% of rats expressing the WF origin allele of iddm4 became diabetic. Testing the progeny of various recombinant N5 WF.iddm4 congenic rats for susceptibility to diabetes suggests that iddm4 is centered on a small segment of chromosome 4 bounded by the proximal marker D4Rat135 and the distal marker D4Got51, an interval of <2.8 cM. The allele at iddm4 has 79% sensitivity and 80% specificity in prediction of diabetes in rats that are segregating for this locus. These characteristics suggest that iddm4 is one of the most powerful non–major histocompatibility complex determinants of susceptibility to autoimmune diabetes described to date.

    Footnotes

    • Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. John Mordes, Diabetes Division, 373 Plantation St., Biotech 2, Suite 218, Worcester, MA 01605. E-mail: john.mordes{at}umassmed.edu.

      Received for publication 18 April 2002 and accepted in revised form 19 August 2002.

      CSGE, conformation-sensitive gel electrophoresis; EST, expressed sequence tag; mAb, monoclonal antibody; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; poly I:C, polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid; VAF, viral antibody free.

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