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WDFY4 deficiency in NOD mice ameliorates autoimmune diabetes and insulitis.

Stephen T FerrisTian-Tian LiuJing ChenRay A OharaFeiya OuRenee WuSunkyung KimTheresa L MurphyKenneth M Murphy
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2023)
The events that initiate autoimmune diabetes in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice remain poorly understood. CD4 + and CD8 + T cells are both required to develop disease, but their relative roles in initiating disease are unclear. To test whether CD4 + T cell infiltration into islets requires damage to β cells induced by autoreactive CD8 + T cells, we inactivated Wdfy4 in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice (NOD. Wdfy4 -/-- ) using CRISPR/Cas9 targeting to eliminate cross-presentation by type 1 conventional dendritic cells (cDC1s). Similar to C57BL/6 Wdfy4 -/- mice, cDC1 in NOD. Wdfy4 -/- mice are unable to cross-present cell-associated antigens to prime CD8 + T cells, while cDC1 from heterozygous NOD. Wdfy4 +/- mice cross-present normally. Further, NOD. Wdfy4 -/- mice fail to develop diabetes while heterozygous NOD. Wdfy4 +/- mice develop diabetes similarly to wild-type NOD mice. NOD. Wdfy4 -/- mice remain capable of processing and presenting major histocompatibility complex class II (MHC-II)-restricted autoantigens and can activate β cell-specific CD4 + T cells in lymph nodes. However, disease in these mice does not progress beyond peri-islet inflammation. These results indicate that the priming of autoreactive CD8 + T cells in NOD mice requires cross-presentation by cDC1. Further, autoreactive CD8 + T cells appear to be required not only to develop diabetes, but to recruit autoreactive CD4 + T cells into islets of NOD mice, perhaps in response to progressive β cell damage.
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