T-Cell Receptor Transgenic Response to an Endogenous Polymorphic Autoantigen Determines Susceptibility to Diabetes
- Mary E. Pauza12,
- Cathleen M. Dobbs34,
- Jing He34,
- Tricia Patterson1,
- Steven Wagner1,
- Brian S. Anobile34,
- Brenda J. Bradley34,
- David Lo5 and
- Kathryn Haskins34
- 1Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield, Illinois
- 2Department of Internal Medicine, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine, Springfield, Illinois
- 3Department of Immunology, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado
- 4National Jewish Medical and Research Center, Denver, Colorado
- 5Digital Gene Technologies, La Jolla, California
- Address correspondence and reprint requests to Kathryn Haskins, Department of Immunology, UCHSC/NJMRC, 1400 Jackson St., K802, Denver, CO 80206. E-mail: katie.haskins{at}uchsc.edu
Abstract
We have produced a T-cell receptor (TCR) transgenic NOD mouse, 6.9TCR/NOD, in which the expression of both diabetogenic T-cells and naturally occurring autoantigen were simultaneously controlled. The parent T-cell clone, BDC-6.9, and T-cells from 6.9TCR/NOD mice recognize a currently unidentified antigen present in NOD but not in BALB/c islet cells. A gene that codes for the antigen, or a protein that regulates the antigen, was previously mapped to a locus on chromosome 6. We have developed transgenic mice bearing the TCR α- and β-chains from the BDC-6.9 T-cell clone on a NOD congenic background in which the antigen locus on chromosome 6 of the NOD mouse is replaced by a segment from BALB/c. These NOD.C6 congenic mice lack the NOD islet cell antigen to which the BDC-6.9 T-cell clone responds. Diabetes in both male and female 6.9TCR/NOD mice is dramatically accelerated, but in 6.9TCR/NOD.C6 mice lacking the NOD islet cell autoantigen, we have not observed diabetes for up to 1 year of age. Thus, the generation of 6.9TCR transgenic mice provides a model of autoimmune diabetes whereby controlled expression of an endogenous polymorphic autoantigen effectively determines disease development.
Footnotes
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M.E.P. and C.M.D. contributed equally to this work.
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- Accepted January 20, 2004.
- Received July 23, 2002.
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