Increased generation of dendritic cells from myeloid progenitors in autoimmune-prone nonobese diabetic mice

RJ Steptoe, JM Ritchie, LC Harrison - The Journal of Immunology, 2002 - journals.aai.org
RJ Steptoe, JM Ritchie, LC Harrison
The Journal of Immunology, 2002journals.aai.org
Aberrant dendritic cell (DC) development and function may contribute to autoimmune
disease susceptibility. To address this hypothesis at the level of myeloid lineage-derived DC
we compared the development of DC from bone marrow progenitors in vitro and DC
populations in vivo in autoimmune diabetes-prone nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice,
recombinant congenic nonobese diabetes-resistant (NOR) mice, and unrelated BALB/c and
C57BL/6 (BL/6) mice. In GM-CSF/IL-4-supplemented bone marrow cultures, DC developed …
Abstract
Aberrant dendritic cell (DC) development and function may contribute to autoimmune disease susceptibility. To address this hypothesis at the level of myeloid lineage-derived DC we compared the development of DC from bone marrow progenitors in vitro and DC populations in vivo in autoimmune diabetes-prone nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice, recombinant congenic nonobese diabetes-resistant (NOR) mice, and unrelated BALB/c and C57BL/6 (BL/6) mice. In GM-CSF/IL-4-supplemented bone marrow cultures, DC developed in significantly greater numbers from NOD than from NOR, BALB/c, and BL/6 mice. Likewise, DC developed in greater numbers from sorted (lineage− IL-7Rα− SCA-1− c-kit+) NOD myeloid progenitors in either GM-CSF/IL-4 or GM-CSF/stem cell factor (SCF)/TNF-α.[3 H] TdR incorporation indicated that the increased generation of NOD DC was due to higher levels of myeloid progenitor proliferation. Generation of DC with the early-acting hematopoietic growth factor, flt3 ligand, revealed that while the increased DC-generative capacity of myeloid-committed progenitors was restricted to NOD cells, early lineage-uncommitted progenitors from both NOD and NOR had increased DC-generative capacity relative to BALB/c and BL/6. Consistent with these findings, NOD and NOR mice had increased numbers of DC in blood and thymus and NOD had an increased proportion of the putative myeloid DC (CD11c+ CD11b+) subset within spleen. These findings demonstrate that diabetes-prone NOD mice exhibit a myeloid lineage-specific increase in DC generative capacity relative to diabetes-resistant recombinant congenic NOR mice. We propose that an imbalance favoring development of DC from myeloid-committed progenitors predisposes to autoimmune disease in NOD mice.
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