Calcium Insufficiency Accelerates Type 1 Diabetes in Vitamin D Receptor-Deficient Nonobese Diabetic (NOD) Mice

Author:

Driver John P.1,Lamont Deanna J.1,Gysemans Conny2,Mathieu Chantal2,Serreze David V.1

Affiliation:

1. The Jackson Laboratory (J.P.D., D.J.L., D.V.S.), Bar Harbor, Maine 04609

2. Laboratory of Experimental Medicine and Endocrinology (C.G., C.M.), Catholic University of Leuven, 3000 Leuven, Belgium

Abstract

Vitamin D exerts important regulatory effects on the endocrine and immune systems. Autoimmune type 1 diabetes (T1D) development in the inbred NOD mouse strain can be accelerated by vitamin D insufficiency or suppressed by chronic treatment with high levels of 1α,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3. Consequently, a report that T1D development was unaffected in NOD mice genetically lacking the vitamin D receptor (VDR) was unexpected. To further assess this result, the mutant stock was imported to The Jackson Laboratory, backcrossed once to NOD/ShiLtJ, and progeny rederived through embryo transfer. VDR-deficient NOD mice of both sexes showed significant acceleration of T1D. This acceleration was not associated with alterations in immune cells targeting pancreatic β-cells. Rather, the capacity of β-cells to produce and/or secrete insulin was severely impaired by the hypocalcaemia developing in VDR-deficient NOD mice fed a standard rodent chow diet. Feeding a high-lactose calcium rescue diet that circumvents a VDR requirement for calcium absorption from the intestine normalized serum calcium levels, restored β-cell insulin secretion, corrected glucose intolerance, and eliminated accelerated T1D in VDR-deficient NOD mice. These findings suggest that calcium and/or vitamin D supplementation may improve disease outcomes in some T1D-prone individuals that are calcium deficient.

Publisher

The Endocrine Society

Subject

Endocrinology

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