Aims/hypothesis: Dendritic cells (DCs) are professional antigen presenting cells involved in the initiation of primary immune responses and the preservation of peripheral tolerance. The aim of this study was to develop a DC vaccine for autoantigen-specific prevention of autoimmune diabetes.

Methods: Splenocytes from diabetes-prone NOD mice were cultured in conditioned media to obtain a homogeneous DC sub-population for vaccination experiments. These cells were used to modulate autoimmune responses in NOD mice after synchronization of diabetes with cyclophosphamide. After immunisation with insulin-pulsed DCs the incidence of diabetes, the insulitis grade and the cytokine production was examined.

Results: The long-term culture of splenocytes resulted in the generation of a cell line, termed NOD-DC1, which have a phenotype of myeloid DCs (CD11c, CD11b, DEC-205), express MHC class II and co-stimulatory molecules (CD40, CD80, CD86). The NOD-DC1 cells have preserved functional activity shown by the detection of a high antigen uptake capacity, the induction of a mixed lymphocyte reaction and stimuli-dependent IL-6 and TNF-alpha secretion. Vaccination with insulin-pulsed NOD-DC1 cells results in an antigen-specific prevention of diabetes. This was mediated by a reduction of the severity of insulitis and a decrease of T helper 1 effector cells.

Conclusion/interpretation: We describe the generation of a DC line which confers protection from diabetes in an antigen-specific way. Our data shows that autoantigen-loaded DCs can induce strong immunoregulatory effects supporting the hypothesis that DCs are promising candidates to develop novel vaccines for the prevention of autoimmune diabetes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00125-003-1199-0DOI Listing

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