Virus-induced diabetes in a transgenic model: role of cross-reacting viruses and quantitation of effector T cells needed to cause disease
Journal of Virology, 2000•journals.asm.org
Virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) at frequencies of> 1/1,000 are sufficient to
cause insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) in transgenic mice whose pancreatic β
cells express as “self” antigen a protein from a virus later used to initiate infection. The
inability to generate sufficient effector CTL for other cross-reacting viruses that fail to cause
IDDM could be mapped to point mutations in the CTL epitope or its COO− flanking region.
These data indicate that IDDM and likely other autoimmune diseases are caused by a …
cause insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) in transgenic mice whose pancreatic β
cells express as “self” antigen a protein from a virus later used to initiate infection. The
inability to generate sufficient effector CTL for other cross-reacting viruses that fail to cause
IDDM could be mapped to point mutations in the CTL epitope or its COO− flanking region.
These data indicate that IDDM and likely other autoimmune diseases are caused by a …
Abstract
Virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) at frequencies of >1/1,000 are sufficient to cause insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) in transgenic mice whose pancreatic β cells express as “self” antigen a protein from a virus later used to initiate infection. The inability to generate sufficient effector CTL for other cross-reacting viruses that fail to cause IDDM could be mapped to point mutations in the CTL epitope or its COO− flanking region. These data indicate that IDDM and likely other autoimmune diseases are caused by a quantifiable number of T cells, that neither standard epidemiologic markers nor molecular analysis with nucleic acid probes reliably distinguishes between viruses that do or do not cause diabetes, and that a single-amino-acid change flanking a CTL epitope can interfere with antigen presentation and development of autoimmune disease in vivo.
