Spontaneous Diabetes in Rats: Destruction of Islets Is Prevented by Immunological Tolerance
- 18 September 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 213 (4514) , 1390-1392
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.6791286
Abstract
Spontaneous diabetes occurring in "BB" rats (derived from a colony of outbred Wistar rats) is the result of destruction of pancreatic islets by infiltrating mononuclear cells (insulitis) and may be a disease very similar to human juvenile onset diabetes. Both diseases probably have an autoimmune etiology. Evidence is presented that islets transplanted to diabetic BB rats are destroyed by the original disease process. Inoculation of bone marrow from normal (nondiabetes-susceptible) rat donors into neonatal BB recipients usually prevents the development of hyperglycemia.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spontaneous Diabetes Mellitus: Reversal and Prevention in the BB/W Rat with Antiserum to Rat LymphocytesScience, 1979
- The Spontaneously Diabetic Wistar Rat: Metabolic and Morphologic StudiesDiabetes, 1977
- Long-term metabolic and immunological considerations in transplantation of pancreatic isletsJournal of Surgical Research, 1974
- HUMAN RENAL ISOGRAFTS: A CLINICAL AND PATHOLOGIC ANALYSIS1Medicine, 1968