A rat monoclonal antibody (mAb) that neutralizes mouse interleukin-12 (IL-12) was administered to female non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice of different ages to dismantle the role of endogenous IL-12 in murine autoimmune diabetogenesis. This mAb was effective in preventing clinical, but not histological signs of spontaneous diabetes when treatment was started early in life at the age of 4 weeks and consecutively continued for 10 weeks. Delaying commencement of anti-IL-12 mAb prophylaxis until the age of 18 weeks, when NOD mice suffer from advanced insulitis, was ineffective. Anti- IL-12 mAb did not influence the course of the accelerated model of diabetes induced by cyclophosphamide. These data prove that the pathogenetic role of endogenous IL-12 in NOD mouse diabetes is restricted to the very early diabetogenic events presumably occurring prior to insulitis development.
CITATION STYLE
Nicoletti, F., Di Marco, R., Zaccone, P., Magro, G., Di Mauro, M., Grasso, S., & Meroni, P. L. (1999). Endogenous interleukin-12 only plays a key pathogenetic role in non- obese diabetic mouse diabetes during the very early stages of the disease. Immunology, 97(3), 367–370. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2567.1999.00836.x
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