Abstract
NOD mice constitute a model for studying the prevention of human autoimmune type 1 diabetes. Glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) could be a key antigen involved in this disease, and GAD65 peptide 524–543 has been implicated in early T cell response in young NOD mice. We performed two i.p. injections of GAD peptide 524–543 (100 μg at each injection), together with Freund*s incomplete adjuvant (FIA), into female NOD mice at 30 and 45 days old. Diabetes was accelerated 2 weeks later by a single injection of cyclophosphamide (CY), which acts against suppressive mechanisms. Treatment with GAD 524–543 peptide delayed the onset of diabetes and reduced its incidence (28% versus 60%; P<0·001) compared with control mice injected with FIA alone, or GAD peptide 534–553, or an irrelevant peptide. In the same group, the severity of lymphocytic inflammation of pancreatic islets was reduced (P<0·03). Up to 3 months after peptide injections, a strong splenocytic proliferative response occurred in immunized NOD mice against the immunizing peptide alone (but not against a panel of seven other GAD65-derived peptides). After peptide challenge of splenocytes in vitro, protection against CY-accelerated diabetes was associated with higher peptide-specific production of T helper type 2 (Th2)-associated interleukins 4 and 10, whereas Th1-associated interferon-gamma and IL-2 were proportionally less represented. During cotransfer, T splenocytes from GAD 524–543-immunized mice were able to reduce the capacity of T cells from diabetic donors to transfer the disease adoptively (P<0·01), demonstrating the generation of cellular mechanisms that actively suppress the disease. It is concluded that immunization of NOD mice with GAD65 peptide 524–543 can counteract CY-accelerated diabetes, possibly through active cellular suppression linked to a shift of Th1/Th2 balance toward the production of Th2 cytokines such as IL-4 and IL-10. This study provides additional support for the notion that GAD, and more precisely its epitope 524–543, could be one of the key targets for the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes in NOD mice, as well as for the efficacy of disease-specific peptide therapy in type 1 diabetes.
Keywords: NOD mice, GAD65, synthetic peptides, diabetes, prevention
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