| Phenotype Description |
Mice heterozygous for the Akita spontaneous mutation (Ins2Akita) are viable and fertile. Symptoms in heterozygous mutant mice include hyperglycemia, hypoinsulinemia, polydipsia, and polyuria, beginning around 3-4 weeks of age. The diabetic phenotype is more severe and progressive in the male than in the female. Obesity or insulitis does not accompany diabetes. The mean lifespan of diabetic male mice on the C57BL/NJcl background (305 days) was significantly shorter than that of nondiabetic males in another colony of the same strain (690 days). Mortality rates of diabetic and nondiabetic female mice of this strain did not differ significantly. Islets from Ins2Akita mice are depleted of beta cells and those remaining release very little mature insulin. This, and the finding that mutant mice respond to exogenously administered insulin, indicate that Ins2Akita mice will serve as an excellent substitute for mice made insulin dependent diabetic by treatment with alloxan or streptozotocin. Heterozygous Ins2Akita mice are also ideally suited to allogeneic or xenogeneic islet transplantation protocols because the investigator does not need to treat the mice with a diabetogen to induce the hyperglycemic state. Untreated homozygotes rarely survive beyond 12 weeks of age
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