Adenovirus early region 3 (E3) immunomodulatory genes decrease the incidence of autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice

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Abstract

The early three (E3) region of the adenovirus (Ad) encodes a number of immunomodulatory proteins that interfere with class I major histocompatibility - mediated antigen presentation and confer resistance to cytokine-induced apoptosis in cells infected by the virus. Transgenic expression of Ad E3 genes under the rat insulin II promoter (RIP-E3) in β-cells in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice decreases the incidence and delays the onset of autoimmune diabetes. The immune effector cells of RIP-E3/NOD mice maintain the ability to infiltrate the islets and transfer diabetes into NOD-scid recipients, although at a significantly reduced rate compared with wild-type littermates. The islets of RIP-E3/NOD mice can be destroyed by adoptive transfer of splenocytes from wild-type NOD mice; however, the time to onset of hyperglycemia is delayed significantly, and 40% of these recipients were not diabetic at the end of the experiment. These findings suggest that expression of E3 genes in β-cells affects both the activation of immune effector cells and the intrinsic resistance of β-cells to autoimmune destruction.

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Efrat, S., Serreze, D., Svetlanov, A., Post, C. M., Johnson, E. A., Herold, K., & Horwitz, M. (2001). Adenovirus early region 3 (E3) immunomodulatory genes decrease the incidence of autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice. Diabetes, 50(5), 980–984. https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.50.5.980

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