Publication | Open Access
Islet-Specific Expression of CXCL10 Causes Spontaneous Islet Infiltration and Accelerates Diabetes Development
113
Citations
34
References
2005
Year
During inflammation, chemokines are conductors of lymphocyte trafficking. The chemokine CXCL10 is expressed early after virus infection. In a virus-induced mouse model for type 1 diabetes, CXCL10 blockade abrogated disease by interfering with trafficking of autoaggressive lymphocytes to the pancreas. We have generated transgenic rat insulin promotor (RIP)-CXCL10 mice expressing CXCL10 in the beta cells of the islets of Langerhans to evaluate how bystander inflammation influences autoimmunity. RIP-CXCL10 mice have islet infiltrations by mononuclear cells and limited impairment of beta cell function, but not spontaneous diabetes. RIP-CXCL10 mice crossed to RIP-nucleoprotein (NP) mice expressing the NP of the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus in the beta cells had massively accelerated type 1 diabetes after lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus infection. Mechanistically, we found a drastic increase in NP-specific, autoaggressive CD8 T cells in the pancreas after infection. In situ staining with H-2D(b)(NP(396)) tetramers revealed islet infiltration by NP-specific CD8 T cells in RIP-NP-CXCL10 mice early after infection. Our results indicate that CXCL10 expression accelerates the autoimmune process by enhancing the migration of Ag-specific lymphocytes to their target site.
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