Bridgett, M.Cetkovic-Cvrlje, M.O'Rourke, R.Shi, Y.Narayanswami, S.Lambert, J.Ramiya, V.Baekkeskov, S.Leiter, E. H.2015-12-022015-12-022015-12-02199810.2337/diabetes.47.12.1848https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/120905Although expressed at very low levels in islets of NOD mice, GAD65 is a candidate islet autoantigen. Two transgenic lines of NOD/Lt mice expressing high levels of human GAD65 from a rat insulin promoter were generated. Transgenes were integrated on proximal chromosome 15 of the A line and on the Y chromosome of the Y line. Transgenic A-line mice were obligate hemizygotes, since homozygous expression resulted in developmental lethality. A twofold higher level of hGAD65 transcripts in A-line islets from young donors was associated with higher GAD protein and enzyme activity levels. Y-line males developed diabetes at a similar rate and incidence as standard NOD/Lt males. In contrast, A-line mice of both sexes exhibited a markedly lowered incidence of diabetes. Insulitis, present in both transgenic lines, developed more slowly in A-line mice and correlated with a reduction in the ratio of gamma-interferon to interleukin-10 transcripts. Splenic leukocytes from young A-line donors transferred diabetes into NOD-scid recipients at a retarded rate compared with those from nontransgenic donors. Further, nontransgenic NOD T-cells transferred diabetes more slowly in NOD-scid recipients that were congenic for A-line transgenes as compared with standard NOD-scid recipients. Primed T-cell responses and spontaneous humoral reactivity to GAD65 failed to distinguish transgenic from nontransgenic mice. Quantitative differences in expression level or insertional mutagenesis are possible mechanisms of protection in the A line.Differential protection in two transgenic lines of NOD/Lt mice hyperexpressing the autoantigen GAD65 in pancreatic beta-cellstext::journal::journal article::research article