Role of ITGAE in the development of autoimmune diabetes in non-obese diabetic mice

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Abstract

There is compelling evidence that autoreactive CD8 + Tcells play a central role in precipitating the development of autoimmune diabetes in non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Given that ITGAE (CD103) recognizes an isletrestricted ligand (E-cadherin), we postulated that its expression is required for initiation of disease.We herein use a mouse model of autoimmune diabetes (NOD/ShiLt mice) to test this hypothesis. We demonstrate that ITGAE is expressed by a discrete subset of CD8 + T cells that infiltrate pancreatic islets before the development of diabetes. Moreover, we demonstrate that development of diabetes in Itgae-deficient NOD mice is significantly delayed at early but not late time points, indicating that ITGAE is preferentially involved in early diabetes development. To rule out a potential contribution by closely linked loci to this delay, we treated WT NOD mice beginning at 2 weeks of age through 5 weeks of age with a depleting anti-ITGAE mAb and found a decreased incidence of diabetes following anti-ITGAE mAb treatment compared with mice that received isotype control mAbs or non-depleting mAbs to ITGAE. Moreover, a histological examination of the pancreas of treated mice revealed that NOD mice treated with a depleting mAb were resistant to immune destruction. These results indicate that ITGAE + cells play a key role in the development of autoimmune diabetes and are consistent with the hypothesis that ITGAE + CD8 + T effectors initiate the disease process.

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Barrie, E. S., Lodder, M., Weinreb, P. H., Buss, J., Rajab, A., Adin, C., … Hadley, G. A. (2015). Role of ITGAE in the development of autoimmune diabetes in non-obese diabetic mice. Journal of Endocrinology, 224(3), 235–243. https://doi.org/10.1530/JOE-14-0396

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