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Original Articles

Excessive Production of Nitric Oxide by Macrophages From DP-BB Rats Is Secondary to the T-Lymphopenic State of These Animals

  1. Albert Lau,
  2. Sheela Ramanathan and
  3. Philippe Poussier
  1. Departments of Immunology Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  2. Medicine, University of Toronto Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  1. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Philippe Poussier, The Wellesley Hospital Research Institute, 160 Wellesley St. East, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4Y 1J3. E-mail: poussier{at}whri.on.ca
Diabetes 1998 Feb; 47(2): 197-205. https://doi.org/10.2337/diab.47.2.197
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Abstract

Activated macrophages are the first mononuclear cells to migrate to the pancreas of DP-BB rats at the initiation of insulitis. These cells produce an excess of NO, which has been implicated as a mediator of both (β-cell damage and inhibition of T-cell proliferation in this rat strain. Genetic studies have shown that the impaired proliferative response of T-cells segregates with one of the diabetes-susceptibility genes of the DP-BB rat, lyp, which is responsible for a peripheral T-lymphopenia. This observation suggests that the dysregulated expression of inducible NO synthase (iNOS) is under the control of lyp itself or a gene in linkage disequilibrium with lyp. Using two models of hemopoietic chimeras—DP-BB rats reconstituted with isocongenic Tcells and irradiated (WF × DP-BB)F1 animals reconstituted with bone marrow of both parental strains—we demonstrated that the production of NO by DP-BB macrophages is normal when these cells originate from a non–T-lymphopenic environment. Consequently, these macrophages no longer inhibit the stimulation of DNA synthesis in activated T-cells. Macrophages of young WF rats were found to produce high levels of NO, which inhibited T-cell proliferation in vitro. This observation strongly suggests that upregulation of NO synthesis in DP-BB macrophages represents the abnormal persistence of a phenomenon restricted to the first few weeks of life in non-diabetes-prone rats. Taken together, these results demonstrate that the elevated production of NO by DP-BB macrophages results from the lyp mutation and represents a crucial mechanism through which T-lymphopenia contributes to the development of diabetes.

  • Received July 22, 1997.
  • Revision received October 14, 1997.
  • Accepted October 14, 1997.
  • Copyright © 1998 by the American Diabetes Association
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February 1998, 47(2)
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Excessive Production of Nitric Oxide by Macrophages From DP-BB Rats Is Secondary to the T-Lymphopenic State of These Animals
Albert Lau, Sheela Ramanathan, Philippe Poussier
Diabetes Feb 1998, 47 (2) 197-205; DOI: 10.2337/diab.47.2.197

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Excessive Production of Nitric Oxide by Macrophages From DP-BB Rats Is Secondary to the T-Lymphopenic State of These Animals
Albert Lau, Sheela Ramanathan, Philippe Poussier
Diabetes Feb 1998, 47 (2) 197-205; DOI: 10.2337/diab.47.2.197
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