Neonatal Fischer-344 (FSH) islets isolated by a nonenzymatic method have been shown to survive indefinitely in Wistar/Furth (WF) recipients. We have applied this islet isolation method to six different donor strains and transplanted the resulting islets across 20 different strain combinations. We report the variable results obtained, with FSH being the most consistently successful donor strain and ACI being the best recipient strain. Based on the complete success of culture-derived FSH (Rt1lv1) and BN (Rt1n) transplants to WF (Rt1u) recipients, we used this system to test the MHC-restriction of autoimmune beta cell destruction in the BB/Wor rat (Rt1u). Culture-derived FSH and/or WF islets were transplanted to pre-diabetic BB/Wor recipients. Animals were sacrificed at the onset of disease or up to 33 days after disease onset. No immune response developed in FSH and WF grafts in non-diabetic animals. In diabetic animals, all FSH grafts and 12/14 WF grafts survived intact, although some grafts exhibited mild-moderate infiltration which was more pronounced in MHC-matched grafts. In two animals which developed severe hyperglycemia and ketosis, the FSH grafts were found to be intact while the WF grafts were destroyed by disease recurrence. In addition, FSH and BN islets were transplanted to diabetic BB/Wor recipients. Three of four FSH islet recipients and two of four BN islet recipients were reversed of their disease. Neither these nor the non-reversed animals showed signs of disease recurrence in the MHC-mismatched grafts. Therefore, in these studies, MHC-mismatched cultured grafts survived well and were capable of reversing the diabetic syndrome in spontaneously diabetic BB/Wor recipients.
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Curr Protoc Immunol
May 2001
University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts.
Use of the BioBreeding (BB) rat to model human insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is useful in that characteristics of diabetes in the BB rat closely parallel those observed in human IDDM. Diabetic animals can be biopsied, autopsied, and bred to study the genetic basis of IDDM. The genetic, immunological, and environmental components of the disease can all be investigated under controlled conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInterleukin 1beta (IL-1) is cytotoxic to rat pancreatic beta-cells in vitro, and increased expression of IL-1 mRNA is found in the islets of Langerhans during development of diabetes in BB/Wor/Mol-BB2 (BB-DP) rats and NOD mice. It has been proposed that IL-1 induces a race between protective and deleterious proteins in the beta-cells during development of diabetes, and that heat shock proteins 70 and 90, and manganese superoxide dismutase, all inducible by IL-1 are potentially protective proteins. We have established a database of approximately 2000 neonatal rat-islet proteins by two-dimensional gel (2-D gel) electrophoresis of [35S]-methionine labelled neonatal Wistar Furth rat islets.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: BB/Wor rats develop spontaneous autoimmune insulin-requiring diabetes mellitus and lymphocytic thyroiditis (LT). Our investigations examined the effect of the thyroid-specific agents, iodine and methimazole (MMI) on thyroid graft survival in BB/Wor rats, compared the intrathyroidal cytokine mRNA expression of endogenous and engrafted thyroids, and ascertained whether unfractionated splenocytes could protect thyroid grafts from lymphocytic infiltration.
Methods: In study 1, 0.
Diabetes
May 1999
Department of Pathology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester 01655-0125, USA.
Type 1 diabetes is a major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II-associated autoimmune disease mediated by beta-cell-specific T-cells and characterized by circulating autoantibodies to beta-cell molecules. In the BB/Wor diabetes-prone (DP) rat, type 1 diabetes develops spontaneously with an incidence of >90%. BB diabetes can be adoptively transferred to naive syngeneic or MHC class II-compatible rats with islet cell-activated T-cell lines derived from diabetic BB/Wor rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutoimmunity
January 1997
Baltimore VA Medical Center, MD, USA.
Autoantigen-reactive T lymphocytes have been implicated in the pathogenesis organ-specific autoimmune disease. Thyroglobulin (Tg) is one of the primary autoantigens associated with autoimmune lymphocytic thyroiditis (LT). These experiments investigated the pathogenicity of a lymphocyte line derived from spontaneously-occurring Tg-reactive T lymphocytes isolated from unprimed NB line BB/Wor rats which have nearly a 100% incidence of spontaneous LT.
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