CIRCULATING LYMPHOCYTE POPULATIONS AND AUTOANTIBODIES IN NONOBESE DIABETIC (NOD) MICE - A LONGITUDINAL-STUDY

  • 1 October 1987
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 70  (1) , 84-93
Abstract
Several previous observations indicate a role for the immune system in the pathogenesis of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) in non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice. In order to assess the status of the immune system in this model of spontaneous diabetes we studied the phenotype of circulating lymphocytes and the humoral autoimmunity to islet cells in non-diabetic NOD mice at various ages. Lymphocyte numbers were low in young NOD mice (age < 160 days) as compared with other strains of mice and increased later to reach values in or above the range of controls. The percentages of circulating T lymphocytes and their L3T4+ and Lyt 2+ subsets were higher in NOD mice of all ages and both sexes than in controls; however, no imbalance of the L3T4+ and Lyt2+ subpopulations was found. Anti-insulin autoantibodies were detected by an ELISA assay in all the NOD mice studied throughout the entire period of observation. Autoantibodies reacting with the cytoplasm of islet cells in Bouin''s fixed pancreas sections, likely to be anti-insulin antibodies, were found in 47 to 58% of the samples from NOD mice aged 75 to 150 days. Antibodies to surface antigens of rat insulinoma cells were virtually absent in young NOD mice (75-100 days) and appeared in 33 to 43% of the samples from 150 to 185 days old NOD mice. The autoantibodies and the quantitative lymphocyte abnormalities reported here, although not predictive of the appearance of overt diabetes, are likely to be involved in the pathogenesis of the disease and therefore may indicate directions for future investigations.