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Publication : Long-term remission of diabetes in NOD mice is induced by nondepleting anti-CD4 and anti-CD8 antibodies.

First Author  Yi Z Year  2012
Journal  Diabetes Volume  61
Issue  11 Pages  2871-80
PubMed ID  22751694 Mgi Jnum  J:208520
Mgi Id  MGI:5563639 Doi  10.2337/db12-0098
Citation  Yi Z, et al. (2012) Long-term remission of diabetes in NOD mice is induced by nondepleting anti-CD4 and anti-CD8 antibodies. Diabetes 61(11):2871-80
abstractText  Residual beta-cells found at the time of clinical onset of type 1 diabetes are sufficient to control hyperglycemia if rescued from ongoing autoimmune destruction. The challenge, however, is to develop an immunotherapy that not only selectively suppresses the diabetogenic response and efficiently reverses diabetes, but also establishes long-term beta-cell-specific tolerance to maintain remission. In the current study, we show that a short course of nondepleting antibodies (Abs) specific for the CD4 and CD8 coreceptors rapidly reversed clinical disease in recent-onset diabetic NOD mice. Once established, remission was maintained indefinitely and immunity to foreign antigens unimpaired. Induction of remission involved selective T-cell purging of the pancreas and draining pancreatic lymph nodes and upregulation of transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta1 by pancreas-resident antigen-presenting cells. Neutralization of TGF-beta blocked the induction of remission. In contrast, maintenance of remission was associated with tissue-specific immunoregulatory T cells. These findings demonstrate that the use of nondepleting Ab specific for CD4 and CD8 is a robust approach to establish long-term beta-cell-specific T-cell tolerance at the onset of clinical diabetes.
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