Effective Destruction of Fas-deficient Insulin-producing β Cells in Type 1 Diabetes
Open Access
- 6 October 2003
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 198 (7) , 1103-1106
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20030698
Abstract
In type 1 diabetes, autoimmune T cells cause destruction of pancreatic β cells by largely unknown mechanism. Previous analyses have shown that β cell destruction is delayed but can occur in perforin-deficient nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice and that Fas-deficient NOD mice do not develop diabetes. However, because of possible pleiotropic functions of Fas, it was not clear whether the Fas receptor was an essential mediator of β cell death in type 1 diabetes. To directly test this hypothesis, we have generated a β cell–specific knockout of the Fas gene in a transgenic model of type 1 autoimmune diabetes in which CD4+ T cells with a transgenic TCR specific for influenza hemagglutinin (HA) are causing diabetes in mice that express HA under control of the rat insulin promoter. Here we show that the Fas-deficient mice develop autoimmune diabetes with slightly accelerated kinetics indicating that Fas-dependent apoptosis of β cells is a dispensable mode of cell death in this disease.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Perforin-independent β-cell destruction by diabetogenic CD8+ T lymphocytes in transgenic nonobese diabetic miceJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1999
- Changes in function of antigen-specific lymphocytes correlating with progression towards diabetes in a transgenic modelThe EMBO Journal, 1998
- Reduced Incidence and Delayed Onset of Diabetes in Perforin-deficient Nonobese Diabetic MiceThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1997
- Requirement of Fas for the Development of Autoimmune Diabetes in Nonobese Diabetic MiceThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1997
- IntroductionResearch in Immunology, 1997
- The Role of Fas in Autoimmune DiabetesCell, 1997
- Insulin-Dependent Diabetes MellitusCell, 1996
- T Helper Cell Subsets in Insulin-Dependent DiabetesScience, 1995
- On the various manifestations of spontaneous autoimmune diabetes in rodent modelsEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1994
- A role for non-MHC genetic polymorphism in susceptibility to spontaneous autoimmunityPublished by Elsevier ,1994