In recent years, transplantation immunologists working with NOD mice have discovered that they have unusual features besides their development of diabetes. NOD mice are highly resistant to tolerance induction by several different approaches, even for skin grafts and heart transplants. NOD mice also have an unusually powerful capacity to reject allografts entirely through the indirect pathway. The experiments proposed in this application will explore the hypothesis that the development of autoimmunity in NOD mice and their unusual transplantation traits have a common etiology involving abnormalities of their peripheral T cell regulatory mechanisms. In the first Specific Aim we will determine the genetic basis for the resistance of NOD mice to tolerance induction and for the unusual strength of their indirect effector response. These experiments will use a classical immunogenetics approach to determine whether the two transplantation traits of NOD mice have a common genetic basis and whether it involves diabetes susceptibility genes. In the second Specific Aim we will use in vitro experiments to explore the mechanisms responsible for the resistance of NOD mice to tolerance induction and for the unusual strength of their indirect effector response. These experiments will determine whether disordered peripheral regulatory mechanisms are responsible for the transplantation traits as well as the tendency of NOD mice to develop autoimmunity. In the third Specific Aim we will perform in vivo experiments designed to explore the mechanisms responsible for the NOD transplantation traits and to overcome their resistance to tolerance induction and the unusual strength of their indirect effector response. Part of the purpose of these experiments is to identify therapies that might be used for patients who might be identified as having the genes responsible for the NOD transplantation phenotype.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01AI054976-02
Application #
6891070
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-SAT (90))
Program Officer
Kehn, Patricia J
Project Start
2004-05-01
Project End
2009-04-30
Budget Start
2005-05-01
Budget End
2006-04-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2005
Total Cost
$437,500
Indirect Cost
Name
Massachusetts General Hospital
Department
Type
DUNS #
073130411
City
Boston
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
02199
Kant, Cavit D; Akiyama, Yoshinobu; Tanaka, Katsunori et al. (2013) Primary vascularization of allografts governs their immunogenicity and susceptibility to tolerogenesis. J Immunol 191:1948-56
Koulmanda, Maria; Bhasin, Manoj; Awdeh, Zuheir et al. (2012) The role of TNF-? in mice with type 1- and 2- diabetes. PLoS One 7:e33254
Akiyama, Yoshinobu; Caucheteux, Stéphane M; Vernochet, Cécile et al. (2011) Transplantation tolerance to a single noninherited MHC class I maternal alloantigen studied in a TCR-transgenic mouse model. J Immunol 186:1442-9
Levesque, V; Bardwell, P D; Shimizu, I et al. (2011) B-cell-dependent memory T cells impede nonmyeloablative mixed chimerism induction in presensitized mice. Am J Transplant 11:2322-31
Benichou, G; Thomson, A W (2009) Direct versus indirect allorecognition pathways: on the right track. Am J Transplant 9:655-6
Boisgérault, Florence; Liu, Ying; Anosova, Nathalie et al. (2009) Differential roles of direct and indirect allorecognition pathways in the rejection of skin and corneal transplants. Transplantation 87:16-23
Koulmanda, Maria; Budo, Ejona; Bonner-Weir, Susan et al. (2007) Modification of adverse inflammation is required to cure new-onset type 1 diabetic hosts. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104:13074-9
Keir, Mary E; Liang, Spencer C; Guleria, Indira et al. (2006) Tissue expression of PD-L1 mediates peripheral T cell tolerance. J Exp Med 203:883-95