Cell Immunol. 1999 Mar 15;192(2):113-21. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE
The nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse, a spontaneous animal model for
insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, displays a tendency in common with
human diabetic populations to develop autoimmune thyroiditis although
incidence and severity of thyroid lesions vary widely among different
colonies around the world. A congenic strain of NOD mice bearing I-Ak on
a NOD background (NOD-H2(h4)) has recently been derived and displays a
much greater tendency to develop thyroiditis and autoantibodies to mouse
thyroglobulin (MTg) although it is free of diabetes. Both thyroid
infiltrates and autoantibody formation are accelerated and enhanced in
NOD-H2(h4) mice by increased iodine intake. The effect of increased
iodine intake on NOD mice themselves has not been directly investigated
although a recent study of these animals given high or low doses of
iodine showed no follicular destruction unless the mice were first
rendered goitrous by iodine deprivation. We found that dietary iodine
increased both the incidence and the severity of thyroid lesions in our
NOD mice although autoantibodies to MTg were absent. NOD background
genes appear to be essential for the development of these lesions, which
were maximal after 4 weeks of iodine administration and showed no
significant regression when the iodine was stopped. Furthermore, our
studies show for the first time that both CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells are
necessary for the development of this accelerated but essentially
spontaneous murine thyroid disease. Copyright 1999 Academic Press.
JOURNAL ARTICLE Animal Autoantibodies/BIOSYNTHESIS CD4-Positive
T-Lymphocytes/*PHYSIOLOGY CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes/*PHYSIOLOGY
Diabetes Mellitus, Insulin-Dependent/*COMPLICATIONS Male Mice Mice,
Inbred CBA Mice, Inbred NOD Mice, Transgenic Rats Sodium
Iodide/*TOXICITY Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Thyroglobulin/IMMUNOLOGY
Thyroiditis/*ETIOLOGY