Abstract
The role of thymic functions in the development of insulin-dependent diabetes was investigated in athymic nude (nu/nu) mice and euthymic heterozygous (+/nu) littermates of BALB/c origin treated with streptozotocin. The injection of a single high dose of streptozotocin (200 mg/kg body wt) induced rapid and permanent hyperglycemia in both nu/nu and +/nu mice. The injection of the same total dose divided into multiple subdiabetogenic doses (40 mg/kg per day for 5 consecutive days) caused the development of delayed but progressive hyperglycemia only in the thymus-competent +/nu mice. Female mice of either genotype were significantly less susceptible to streptozotocin at both doses. Restoration of thymic immunity in nu/nu mice by thymus grafts restored the susceptibility to the hyperglycemic effects of multiple low doses of streptozotocin. Splenic lymphocytes from +/nu mice previously made diabetic with the multiple low-dose injections of streptozotocin induced transient glucose intolerance in nu/nu mice. The ability of the diabetic spleen cells to transfer the diabetic state was abolished when the splenic lymphocytes were depleted of the T cells but not when they were depleted of B cells. Thymus-dependent functions evidently play an obligatory etiologic role in the development of diabetes in mice treated with repeated subdiabetogenic doses of streptozotocin. Autoimmune amplification mechanisms may be critically involved in the etiology of juvenile-onset diabetes mellitus in humans.

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