Treatment with GAD65 or BSA does not protect against diabetes in BB rats

1997 
The Mr 65,000 isoform of glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65) has been implicated as the initiating islet cell antigen in the pathogenesis of diabetes, primarily based on studies in non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice. To test the role of this islet cell autoantigen in the pathogenesis of spontaneously occurring diabetes in another animal model, purified recombinant human islet GAD65 was injected i.v. at 200 μg/animal into 18-day-old diabetes-prone BB rats. For controls, bovine serum albumin (BSA), which has also been implicated in the pathogenesis of diabetes, or buffer alone was injected into age matched BB rats. At 210 days of age there were no differences in diabetes incidence in the 3 groups, i.e. 73% (11 of 15) in the GAD65-treated, 81% (13 of 16) in the BSA-treated and 65% (11 of 17) in the buffer-treated animals, or in the median age at onset of disease, i.e. 79 days (range 65-111), 87 days (range 60–107) and 86 days (range 74–109), respectively. The lack of protection against diabetes following GAD65 tr...
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