Prevention of autoimmune diabetes by linomide in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice is associated with up-regulation of the TCR-mediated activation of p21(ras).
Oral therapy with linomide protects prediabetic nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice from insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. The mechanisms by which linomide exerts its protective effect are not fully understood. A decreased TCR-mediated activity of the GTP-GDP binding p21(ras) proto-oncogene is associated with prediabetes in NOD mice. However, the role of this signal transduction defect in the pathogenesis of autoimmune diabetes is not known. The TCR-mediated and protein kinase C-induced activations of p21(ras) were determined in mononuclear cells from lymph nodes of linomide-treated and untreated prediabetic NOD mice. TCR cross-linking by Con A induced an increase of 13 +/- 6.8% and a decrease of 0.8 +/- 1.8% in p21(ras) activity in the linomide-treated group and the untreated controls, respectively. Cell stimulation with PMA resulted in a 15 +/- 2% increase in p21(ras) activity in the linomide-treated mice and a 10 +/- 11.4% decrease in the untreated mice. Protein levels of p21(ras) and its regulatory elements, the GTPase-activating protein and the guanine nucleotide-releasing factor, mSOS, were comparable in both groups. We, therefore, conclude that prevention of autoimmune diabetes by linomide is associated with up-regulation of the p21(ras) T cell signal transduction defect in NOD mice.[1]References
- Prevention of autoimmune diabetes by linomide in nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice is associated with up-regulation of the TCR-mediated activation of p21(ras). Rapoport, M.J., Weiss, L., Mor, A., Bistritzer, T., Ramot, Y., Slavin, S. J. Immunol. (1996) [Pubmed]
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