Presented antigen from damaged pancreatic β cells activates autoreactive T cells in virus-mediated autoimmune diabetes (original) (raw)

Prior work has established the ability of poly I:C, a double-stranded nucleic acid, to invoke a type 1 IFN antiviral response without the accompanying damage of a viral infection (21). Additional work by Tough et al. (13) had shown that poly I:C treatment could act similarly to LCMV infection and stimulate nonspecific memory T cells. Whether these activated T cells could then participate in an autoimmune or pathologic response has been controversial. To examine whether the upregulation of the type 1 IFN pathway could induce IDDM through stimulation of memory T cells, we treated BDC2.5 Tg mice with poly I:C (100 μg per mouse) and monitored for disease onset. While CB4 induces diabetes in 67% of the infected BDC2.5 Tg mice within 4 weeks, poly I:C treatment was unable to induce clinical disease (Figure 1a). The IFN response to poly I:C was comparable to that observed following LCMV infection, as IFN-γ levels were similar in mice 3 days after treatment or infection as measured by ELISA (350 ng/ml). To establish whether treatment was able to increase the level of insulitis without inducing diabetes, we stained pancreatic tissue sections with insulin-specific antibody to demonstrate any loss of insulin-containing β cells. However, no increase in the level of peri-insulitis or insulitis was observed following treatment (Table 1). No histological changes were observed in the pancreas between age-matched treated and untreated BDC2.5 Tg mice (Figure 2a). To determine whether poly I:C treatment was able to activate lymphocytes in the BDC2.5 Tg mouse, lymphocytes were isolated from treated and untreated mice and stained with antibodies to cell surface molecules for analysis by flow cytometry. Although none of the CD4+ Vβ4+ (Tg TCR) lymphocytes showed changes in CD25, CD44, or CD69, indicating a lack of activation, the CD4– Vβ4+ T cell subset, representing primarily CD8+ T lymphocytes, demonstrated upregulation of these markers, denoting their activation (Figure 3a). Therefore, treatment of BDC2.5 Tg mice with poly I:C was comparable to infection with the noncytopathic virus, LCMV, and in neither case were the resting memory Tg CD4+ cells activated or disease induced.

(a) Incidence of diabetes in BDC2.5 mice following poly I:C treatment. BDCFigure 1

(a) Incidence of diabetes in BDC2.5 mice following poly I:C treatment. BDC Tg mice and nontransgenic littermate controls were treated with 100 μg of poly I:C. Alternatively, BDC Tg mice were infected with 100 pfu of CB4. Mice were monitored twice weekly for blood glucose, and mice with two consecutive values over 300 mg/dl were considered diabetic. Both BDC2.5 mice (n = 12) and their nontransgenic littermates (n = 12) were analyzed and compared with untreated BDC Tg mice (n = 20). (b) Incidence of diabetes in BDC2.5 mice following STZ treatment. BDC Tg mice and nontransgenic littermates were treated with single doses of 0, 40, 80, or 160 mg/kg of STZ. Mice were monitored twice weekly for blood glucose, and mice with two consecutive values over 300 mg/dl were considered diabetic. (c) Incidence of diabetes in NOD/Shi mice following STZ treatment. Twelve-week-old NOD/Shi mice (n = 29) were treated with 80 mg/kg of STZ. Mice were monitored twice weekly for blood glucose, and mice with two consecutive values over 300 mg/dl were considered diabetic. Treated mice were analyzed and compared with untreated NOD/Shi mice (n = 10). Mice from all groups were age matched. Groups from b and c were compared for statistical significance by standard χ-square tests. Of the relevant comparisons, significant differences were observed between STZ-treated (80 mg/kg) BDC mice and STZ-treated (80 mg/kg) NOD mice at both 2 (P < 0.001) and 4 (P < 0.001) weeks after treatment.

(a) Histological analysis of pancreata of treated BDC Tg and NOD mice. ReprFigure 2

(a) Histological analysis of pancreata of treated BDC Tg and NOD mice. Representative sections of the pancreas from STZ-treated BDC Tg mice and poly I:C–treated BDC Tg mice reveal islet cell integrity and function. The function of β cells was confirmed by immunohistochemistry using antibody to insulin (INS) (×400), present as brown staining. Mice were sacrificed at 2 weeks after treatment. (b) Immunohistological analysis of the islets from treated BDC Tg mice for activated T cells. Representative immunostained sections of islets from the pancreas of either STZ- or poly I:C–treated BDC Tg mice. Immunohistochemical staining for either CD4 or CD25 was performed and revealed CD4+ lymphocytes in both mice, but only STZ-treated mice have activated CD4+ cells as demonstrated by CD25 staining. Immunostained cells are brown (×400). The mice were sacrificed at 14 days after treatment. (c) Immunohistological analysis of pancreata from treated BDC Tg and NOD mice for macrophages. Representative immunostained sections of the pancreas from CB4-infected and STZ- and poly I:C–treated BDC Tg and NOD mice reveal differences in the number and activation state of resident macrophages. Antibody to the macrophage activation marker F4/80 was used to identify activated macrophages, which, following CB4 infection and STZ treatment of BDC Tg mice, appear to become activated in the peri-insular inflammation and to mobilize into the islets of Langerhans during insulitis (×400). Brown anti-macrophage staining is present over macrophages. Mice were sacrificed 2 weeks after infection or treatment.

Analysis of the activation state of lymphocytes from BDC2.5 mice followingFigure 3

Analysis of the activation state of lymphocytes from BDC2.5 mice following treatment with either poly I:C (a) or STZ (b). Cells were stained with antibody to Vβ4 TCR, CD4, and antibody to either CD25, CD44, or CD69. Cells were analyzed by FACS and compared to isotype controls. Shown are histograms of mean fluorescent intensities generated by gating on 10,000–20,000 CD4+, Vβ4+ cells, or Vβ4+, CD4– cells. (a). For both a and b, the plots are representative of one of six mice analyzed, and all six had similar results. (a) Analysis of peripheral blood lymphocytes before (narrow) and three days following poly I:C treatment (wide) from identical mouse are displayed. No shift of activation is observed in the Vβ4+, CD4+ T cell population while activation is observed in the Vβ4+, CD4– (CD8+) T cell population posttreatment (PT). Changes in cell populations and gated markers CD4+, Vβ4+: CD25, 5.7% to 7.2%; CD44-high, 28.6% to 25.2%; CD69, 6.7% to 6.9% and CD4–, Vβ4+: CD25, 2.9% to 27.8%; CD 44-high, 22.9% to 65.0%; CD69, 10.7% to 41.8%. (b) Analysis of lymphocytes from the spleen and pancreatic lymph node before (narrow) and seven days following STZ treatment (wide) are displayed. Mice were analyzed at three, five, and seven days PT. Similar results were observed at five days, but not at three days. A dramatic shift in all three activation markers was observed in the spleen PT. A less dramatic shift was observed in the pancreatic lymph node.Changes in cell populations and gated markers in spleen CD4+ Vβ4+ : CD25, 10.4% to 32.9%; CD44-high, 19.8% to 56.5%; CD69, 9.0% to 32.3%; and in pancreatic lymph nodes, CD4+ Vβ4+ : CD25, 5.4% to 25.3%; CD44-high, 7.2% to 18.9%; CD69, 8.7% to 27.0%.

Table 1

Summary of histological analysis of pancreatic sections from treated mice

Treatment with a single subdiabetogenic dose of STZ damages β cells directly with only minimal immune cell involvement (1417). While a multiple high- or low-dose regime of STZ leaves the mouse without functional β cells and induces autoimmune diabetes, a single low-dose treatment causes significantly less damage and does not induce clinical disease (14, 15, 17). During coxsackievirus infection of most mouse strains, limited damage to the β cells is observed. The loss of a few β cells is most likely counterbalanced by the limited ability of β cells to regenerate. To mimic the minimal level of viral damage to the islet, mice would need to be treated with a single low dose of STZ that would damage only a few β cells, leaving the majority of insulin-producing cells intact without altering clinical disease incidence on its own. For this purpose, a pilot study was performed with a single treatment of STZ. One of three concentrations of STZ, 40, 80, or 160 mg/kg, was administrated and mice were monitored for clinical disease. Initial treatments with STZ clearly indicated that induction of diabetes was dose-dependent (Figure 1b), and a single dose of 80 mg/kg was chosen for further study. After administration of 80 mg/kg of STZ, BDC2.5 Tg mice developed IDDM in a manner and time frame similar to that induced by CB4 infection of BDC2.5 Tg mice (Figure 1b). That is, 67% of the mice became diabetic within 2–4 weeks of treatment. To ensure that this was not an effect of the NOD MHC background, since this murine strain spontaneously develops diabetes, a large cohort of age-matched (12-week-old) female NOD mice were treated simultaneously (Figure 1c). The NOD mice had a slight increase in the incidence of diabetes compared with that of spontaneous disease in our colony, but this incidence of STZ-induced NOD disease was significantly lower than that in the BDC2.5 Tg treated mice (P < 0.001).

STZ-treated BDC2.5 Tg mice had a marked loss of insulin-producing β cells, which was accompanied by a dramatic rise in insulitis. The quantitated insulitis index showed a significant increase (P < 0.001) that coincided with the onset of diabetes (Table 1). To characterize the nature of these infiltrating lymphocytes, tissue sections were immunostained with antibody to CD4, CD25 (Figure 2b), and Vβ4 (data not shown). The infiltrating cells were predominantly CD4+ lymphocytes and a sizable percentage of the infiltrating population was indeed CD25+ or IL-2 receptor–positive, reflecting an activated state (Figure 2b). As we had observed previously in the islets of CB4-infected mice (6), the predominant cell type was indeed the transgenic T cell and therefore both CD4+ and Vβ4+. Additionally, while loss of insulin staining in β cells without strong insulitis is a common event in STZ-treated NOD mice (Figure 2a), this was not the case in the STZ-treated BDC mice since loss of insulin production by β cells was closely associated with immune cell infiltration and insulitis. This outcome strongly suggests that resting memory T cells become activated due to the release of sequestered antigen during the environmental insult.

Local increases of activated macrophages in pancreatic islets accompany the progression of insulitis in mice developing diabetes (22, 23). This sequence is clearly visible in both NOD mice developing spontaneous diabetes and CB4-infected BDC Tg mice. Following single-dose STZ treatment of NOD mice, insulin production decreased without significant insulitis (Figure 2a). Consequently, fewer activated macrophages were present in the affected islets. To determine whether the islets of the STZ-treated BDC mice were phenotypically similar to the islets from virus-infected mice, pancreatic tissue sections were immunostained with F4/80 antibody to locate activated macrophages. As depicted in Figure 2c, the presence of macrophages in the islets of STZ-treated BDC mice closely resembled the situation in the islets of CB4-infected BDC mice. In contrast, BDC mice treated with poly I:C and NOD mice given STZ did not exhibit pronounced insulitis, nor was there any significant increase in activated macrophages.

To correlate the shift in state from resting to activation in the transgenic Vβ4+ lymphocytes with the increase in insulitis and onset of diabetes, lymphocytes were isolated from the spleens and pancreatic lymph nodes of treated and untreated BDC2.5 mice and stained with antibodies to cell surface molecules including Vβ4 (Tg TCR), IL-2 receptor (CD25), CD44, CD69, and L-selectin (CD62L) for analysis by flow cytometry. As previously reported, the predominant phenotype of the transgenic CD4+ Vβ4+ population of T cells signified resting memory as demonstrated by high expression of CD44 and absence of expression of CD25, CD69 (Figure 3b), and CD62L (data not shown). Strikingly, five days after STZ treatment, transgenic lymphocytes were activated, as confirmed by the increased numbers of Vβ4+ lymphocytes staining for the activation markers CD25 and CD69, as well as the memory and activation marker CD44 (Figure 3). However, NOD mice had no obvious increase in activation in CD4+ T cells following STZ treatment. Additionally, similar STZ treatments of OT-II TCR Tg mice that express an MHC class II restricted TCR specific for ovalbumin (24) did not activate T cells when measured by a similar FACS analysis for upregulation of the activation markers CD25, CD44, or CD69 (data not shown). Thus, the single low-dose treatment of STZ is acting solely as a β cell toxin and did not directly activate T cells. The shift in T cell activation by a significant portion of Vβ4+ cells correlated with the rapid and significant increase in insulitis composed predominantly of Vβ4+ (Tg) cells, β cell loss, and observed diabetes similar to that observed following CB4 infection. However, in this case, a β cell toxin replaced the virus, further underscoring the requirement for β cell damage in the development of IDDM.

The ability of STZ to elicit diabetes with kinetics and phenotype similar to those of diabetes elicited by CB4 infection demonstrates that virus-mediated diabetes is the result of direct damage to the β cells followed by activation of an autoreactive memory response that attacks and destroys the islets. The direct damage of β cells associated with either the single low-dose STZ (at 80 mg/kg) treatment or CB4 infection is, by itself, not sufficient to cause diabetes, since nontransgenic mice show little enhancement in disease. However, in both instances, sufficient β cell damage occurs to allow for release of sequestered β cell antigen and stimulation of the resting memory T cell population. This result, most likely, reflects the ability of pancreatic APCs to process and present β cell antigen and thereby stimulate the BDC T cell.

To demonstrate that APCs take up islet antigen and stimulate the BDC T cells, we performed in vitro proliferation assays. APCs were enriched using plastic adherence from mice either treated or not treated with STZ; BDC T cells from untreated mice were then cocultivated with these APCs. As a control, APCs from untreated mice were cultured with BDC T cells and antigenic peptide (20). Previous work has demonstrated that enriched APCs can harbor antigen following viral infection or during local pathogenic inflammation and can present this antigen in in vitro proliferation assays (19, 2527). In this situation, the pancreatic inflammation initially induced by the STZ treatment is minor in comparison to that reported in previous studies (19, 2527), yet a subpopulation of APCs from these STZ-treated mice would be expected to have gathered endogenous islet cell antigen following STZ-induced β cell damage. These APCs would be capable of stimulating BDC T cells in culture to proliferate; however, stimulation would also induce these APCs to digest the harbored endogenous β cell antigen rapidly (28). Additionally, unlike most standard in vitro proliferation assays in which antigen is not continuously available and is only brought into the culture within the APC. Therefore, the assay results should give lower stimulation indices than in the case of provided antigen or the peptide control. Additionally, the assay would peak in stimulation at a much earlier time point. In fact this was the case: the stimulation index peaked at day 3 of coculture and the index averaged about 4 for mice treated with STZ as compared with 1 for APCs from untreated mice (Figure 4). In the absence of exogenous antigen, APCs from mice with damaged β cells were capable of stimulating the β cell–specific BDC T cell, while APCs from mice without β cell damage did not stimulate these T cells. Therefore, following an insult to the pancreatic islets, the ability of the APC to process and present β cell antigen to the BDC T cell is crucial to T cell activation.

Presentation of endogenous antigen by APCs from STZ-treated mice activatesFigure 4

Presentation of endogenous antigen by APCs from STZ-treated mice activates β cell–specific BDC T cells. Adherent mononuclear cells from NOD mice treated with STZ or PBS were prepared, irradiated, and cultured with BDC2.5 Tg splenocytes (2 × 105) at various ratios. Shown is a summary of results from the 4:1 ratio, T cell (2 × 105): APC (5 × 104). Also shown are the results of culturing these cells at 4:1 in the presence of antigenic peptide (7 μM) (20) specific for the BDC T cell. Cultures were pulsed with 1 μCi of 3H thymidine at 48 hours and harvested 18 hours thereafter. The data presented are from four separate experiments involving a total of eight mice in each group representing the APC populations. Values are presented as stimulation index + SEM as compared with BDC splenocytes incubated without additional APCs or antigen. Background in all experiments was between 500 and 2500 cpm.

To further demonstrate the importance of APC presentation and stimulation of T cells during the development of diabetes, adoptive transfer experiments were performed (Table 2). APCs enriched from STZ-treated NODSCID mice induced diabetes when transferred into naive BDC TCR Tg mice, while APCs from untreated mice did not induce disease. Conversely, to determine whether STZ treatment could prime mice for the development of disease, we transferred BDC2.5 Tg T cells into STZ-treated recipients. The experiments showed that splenocytes from BDC TCR Tg mice induced rapid diabetes when transferred into STZ-treated NODSCID mice. Splenocytes from BDC TCR Tg mice typically induce IDDM in NODSCID mice following transfer, but at a much slower rate and rarely before 4 weeks after transfer. Therefore the development of diabetes is the direct result of APCs presenting islet antigen from STZ-induced β cell damage and activating BDC T cells.

Table 2

Transfer of autoimmune diabetes with APCs from mice with damaged β cells

In BDC Tg mice, the autoreactive resting memory T cells are provided by transgenic technology. Development of this resting memory population of lymphocytes in prediabetic patients is, quite possibly, the consequence of previous pancreatropic infections. Whether given virus or STZ, the BDC Tg mice develop diabetes with similar kinetics, incidence, and severity. Taken together these data support the argument that diabetes is a result of environmental damage to the β cells.

Alternatively, inflammation from environmental insults like CB4 or STZ could stimulate the BDC TCR through a second TCR expressed with a different or nontransgenic Vα chain. The ability of the endogenous Vα chain to avoid allelic exclusion and to recombine, be expressed, and interact with the transgenic Vβ chain has been well described (2931). However, when these same BDC mice were crossed with another TCR Tg mouse to determine whether activation of the second TCR could activate BDC T cells, the results convincingly demonstrated that this could not occur in vivo to induce diabetes (32). One experimental drawback of this system is the lack of knowledge of the true BDC-specific antigen; however, recently, antigenic peptides have been identified that stimulate the BDC2.5 T (20). Although the nature of the natural islet autoantigen is not known, it is clear that an active response from F4/80-positive cells is required within the islet itself before disease develops. Activated macrophages or dendritic cells are most likely picking up released antigen and presenting it to resting memory Tg T cells. Conversely, STZ-treated NOD mice do not have the same level of activated F4/80 staining cells and likewise exhibit less insulitis. Further, while APCs isolated from STZ-treated NOD or NODSCID mice successfully activated the BDC T cell and induced diabetes (Figure 4), they did not induce disease in NOD mice (data not shown). Therefore, mere stimulation of macrophages by STZ or β cell damage does not necessarily activate T cells to induce disease. A critical level of autoreactive precursor resting memory T cells is most likely required (33, 34). Clearly, once initiated, the responses of both T cells and APCs amplify each other and heighten pathologic effects. The requirements of costimulation for this initiation are probably reduced, since the memory state of the T cells lessens the priming requirements of these cells.

NOD mice treated with STZ did not exhibit an increase in diabetes development despite the release of islet antigen and the prevalence of autoreactive lymphocytes. The major difference between the BDC mice, in which diabetes is STZ-inducible, and the NOD mice is the frequency of autoreactive precursor resting memory T cells. The transgenic population consists primarily of CD4+, CD44-high, CD62L-low islet-specific lymphocytes with few requirements for activation. In the NOD mouse, these autoreactive lymphocytes are present at a much lower frequency. Despite the predominance of a single specific T cell population, the BDC Tg mouse had enough flexibility to combat viral infections and counter-regulate its large number of autoreactive cells. This abnormal T cell repertoire of the BDC mouse is obviously an exaggerated version of a human preclinical situation.

In patients, genetic predisposition and environmental exposures could lead to a similar expansion of autoreactive T cells, leading to peri-insulitis. This repertoire could undergo further distortion in response to viral infection, as has been reported by others (3537). Ultimately, release of sequestered antigen by viral infection or environmental insult would be the triggering event in disease initiation, as observed in the STZ-treated or CB4-infected BDC mouse. It was previously proposed that, in a situation with a distorted lymphocyte repertoire, infection could shift the balance and result in a loss of regulatory T cells, allowing disease to occur. Similarly, viral interference of the host immune regulatory process has been observed in mice with normal T cell repertoires, and the result was an increased survival rate of nonviral-specific T cells (11, 38, 39). However, a single low dose of STZ (acting in place of CB4) did not directly activate T cells or interfere with the turnover or regulation of autoreactive cells. STZ can fully replace the virus in IDDM development; thus the role of CB4 is clearly to damage β cells and not to act as an immune modulator.

The inability of poly I:C to upregulate the BDC Tg T cell and initiate disease argues against a role for bystander T cell amplification in the development of virus-mediated autoimmune disease. Although viruses have the ability to upregulate nonspecific responses and to enhance disease, this bystander amplification is subject to limitations in the scope of its involvement. Results from other investigators (40, 41) imply that an additional factor is required to reactivate lymphocytes and drive autoimmunity. Merely activating potential autoimmune T cells is not enough to cause disease. Yet, in some instances, viral cross-activation has increased the incidence of disease (42, 43). Cross-activation during infection is predominantly associated with CD8+ T cells through the type 1 IFN pathway and involves IL-15 and the use of the IL-2β receptor that is specifically found on CD8+, but not CD4+, T cells. Conversely, CD4+ T cells are not similarly reactivated. This activation of CD8+ T cells by IFN was induced by IL-15 and appeared to utilize the IL-2 receptor β that is found on CD8+ T cells but not CD4+ T cells (44). Although CD8+ T cells participate in nonspecific cross-activation, systems involving CD4+ lymphocytes, as in coxsackievirus-induced IDDM of BDC2.5 Tg mice (6), herpes simplex virus-1–induced herpetic stromal keratitis (45), and pathogen-induced experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (46), show little cross-activation. In systems dependent on CD8+ lymphocytes, such as the LCMV transgenic models (43, 47), systemic cross-activation may be the only requirement for activating memory CD8+ T cells, inducing pathogenic T cells and producing disease. Additionally, in general, CD8+ T cell effectors have fewer counter-regulatory mechanisms than do CD4+ T cells. In the case of human autoimmune disease, the actions of CD8+ T cells may, in turn, be more important during relapses and be critical to the development of both IDDM and multiple sclerosis. Certainly CD4+ and CD8+ T cells are both important participants in human autoimmune disease. Their reactivation, apparently via separate mechanisms, is clearly mutually dependent. Differences in the inducibility of diabetes between the BDC2.5 Tg mouse and its NOD littermate further elucidate not only the crucial importance of breakdown and release of sequestered antigen, but also the requirement for a sizable pre-existing memory population of autoreactive lymphocytes in the development of overt clinical disease.