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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (
type 1 diabetes
)
20,749
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
MHC class II genes play an important role in the autoimmune destruction of the pancreatic b-cell occurring in
IDDM
. The genetic pattern of the disease was investigated in Mexican Mestizos. The serological findings of HLA antigens showed a significant association of DR3, DR4, DQ2 and DQ8 and a protective effect of DR11, DR15, DQ5, DQ6 and DQ7. With these results, DNA analysis of HLA-DRB1, B3, B4, DQA1, DQB1, DPA1, DPB1 genes was performed using PCR with allele specific oligotyping. Among the patients, 92.78 carry DQA1 alleles that have
ARG
in position 52 of DQa chain, and 78.2% are ASP- in DQ5-57. The RR for homozygotes is 32.8 and 5.6, respectively. The main haplotype involved is DRB1*0405, DQA1*0301, DQB1*0302. Thus, DQa and DQb form a relevant recognition site for the "diabetogenic peptidett which induces the autoimmune destruction. Positions 57 and 74 of DRB1 locus contribute highly to the expression and severity of
IDDM
in Mestizos and other ethnic groups, but not in Caucasians or Blacks.
...
PMID:[MHC-dependent molecular mechanisms of susceptibility and protection in type I diabetes in Mexicans]. 894 98
This study of 113 adolescent females with
IDDM
and their mothers investigated whether: (1) interaction patterns are more dysfunctional in families of girls with eating disturbances than in those without; and (2) the relationship between family functioning and metabolic control is mediated by an eating disturbance. Based on self-reported eating attitudes and behaviors, subjects were categorized as Nondisturbed (N = 56), Mildly Disturbed (N = 37), and Highly Disturbed (N = 20). Mothers and daughters rated overall family functioning (
FES
), and daughters rated parental relationships (IPPA, MFP). Metabolic control was assessed using HbA1c levels. MANCOVA illustrated that eating disturbances are associated with the perception of poor communication with mothers and fathers, a lack of trust in their accessibility and responsiveness, and overall family environments perceived to be conflictual and inadequate in support and structure. Regression analyses revealed that the presence and severity of an eating disturbance mediates the influence of family functioning on metabolic control.
...
PMID:Eating disturbances, diabetes and the family: an empirical study. 958 90
Thymic epithelium, including nurse cells (
TEC
/TNC), as well as other thymic stromal cells (macrophages and dentritic cells), express a repertoire of polypeptide belonging to various neuroendocrine protein families (such as the neurophypophysial, tachykinin, neurotensin and insulin families). A hierarchy of dominance exists in the organization of the thymic repertoire of neuroendocrine precursors. Oxytocin (OT) is more expressed in the
TEC
/TNC than vasopressin (VP); insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF-2) thymic expression predominates over IGF-1, and much more over (pro)insulin. Thus, OT was proposed to be the self antigen of the neurohypophysial family, and IGF-2 the self antigen precursor of the insulin family. The dual role of the thymus in T-cell life and death is recapitulated at the level of the thymic neuroendocrine protein repertoire. Indeed, thymic polypeptides behave as accessory signals involved in T-cell development and positive selection according to the cryptocrine model of signaling. Moreover, thymic neuroendocrine polypeptides are the source of self antigens presented by thymic MHC molecules to developing pre-T cells. This presentation might induce the negative selection of T cells bearing a randomly rearranged antigen receptor (TCR) oriented against neuroendocrine families. Using an animal model of autoimmune
type 1 diabetes
(BB rat), we have shown a defect in intrathymic expression of the self antigen of the insulin family (IGF-2) and in IGF-2-mediated T-cell education to recognize and tolerate the insulin family. Altogether these studies have enlightened the crucial role played by the thymus in the induction of the central self tolerance of neuroendocrine families. The tolerogenic properties of thymic self peptides could be used in a novel type of vaccination for the prevention of autoimmune diseases.
...
PMID:The thymic repertoire of neuroendocrine-related self antigens: biological role in T-cell selection and pharmacological implications. 987 42
Leptin expression in third trimester placenta (p) and leptin concentrations in umbilical cord blood (cb) were investigated in normal pregnancies [n = 10 (p), 31 (cb)] and abnormal pregnancies complicated with (i) maternal insulin-dependent diabetes [
IDDM
: n = 3 (p), 13 (cb)], (ii) gestational diabetes [GD: n = 2 (p), 10 (cb)] and (iii) fetal growth retardation [
FGR
: n = 5 (p), 5 (cb)]. By in-situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry, placental leptin mRNA and protein were co-localized to the syncytiotrophoblast and villous vascular endothelial cells. Leptin receptor was immunolocalized to the syncytiotrophoblast. Relative to controls, the
FGR
group was characterized by low concentrations of placental and cord blood leptin. In a twin pregnancy, the normal-sized infant exhibited more placental and cord blood leptin than its growth-retarded twin. In contrast, both diabetic groups exhibited high concentrations of placental leptin mRNA and protein. The
IDDM
group exhibited the highest concentrations of leptin in cord blood. No change was observed in the expression of the leptin receptor in either the growth-retarded or diabetic pregnancies. In conclusion, the localization of placental leptin suggests that it may be released into both maternal and fetal blood. Furthermore, in fetal growth-retarded and diabetic pregnancies, the changes in leptin expression in the placenta and in leptin concentrations in umbilical cord blood appear to be related.
...
PMID:Placental leptin in normal, diabetic and fetal growth-retarded pregnancies. 1090 88
Peripheral T lymphocyte activation in response to TCR/CD3 stimulation is reduced in type 1 diabetic patients. To explore the basis of this deficiency, a comprehensive analysis of the signal transduction pathway downstream of the TCR/CD3 complex was performed for a cohort of patients (n = 38). The main result of the study shows that T cell hyporesponsiveness is positively correlated with a reduced amount of p56(lck) in resting T lymphocytes. Upon CD3-mediated activation, this defect leads to a hypophosphorylation of the CD3zeta-chain and few other polypeptides without affecting the recruitment of
ZAP70
. Other downstream effectors of the TCR/CD3 transduction machinery, such as phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase p85alpha, p59(fyn), linker for activation of T cells (LAT), and phospholipase C-gamma1, are not affected. In some patients, the severity of this phenotypic deficit could be linked to low levels of p56(lck) mRNA and resulted in the failure to efficiently induce the expression of the CD69 early activation marker. We propose that a primary deficiency in human
type 1 diabetes
is a defect in TCR/CD3-mediated T cell activation due to the abnormal expression of the p56(lck) tyrosine kinase.
...
PMID:Specific deficiency of p56lck expression in T lymphocytes from type 1 diabetic patients. 1106 48
The repertoire of thymic neuroendocrine precursors plays a dual role in T-cell differentiation as the source of either cryptocrine accessory signals in T-cell development or neuroendocrine self-antigens presented by the thymic major histocompatibility complex (MHC) machinery. Thymic neuroendocrine self-antigens usually correspond to peptide sequences highly conserved during the evolution of one family. The thymic presentation of some neuroendocrine self-antigens is not restricted by MHC alleles. Oxytocin (OT) is the dominant peptide of the neurohypophysial family. It is expressed by thymic epithelial and nurse cells (
TEC
/TNCs) of different species. Ontogenetic studies have shown that the thymic expression of the OT gene precedes the hypothalamic one. Both OT and VP stimulate the phosphorylation of p125FAK and other focal adhesion-related proteins in murine immature T cells. These early cell activation events could play a role in the promotion of close interactions between thymic stromal cells and developing T cells. It is established that such interactions are fundamental for the progression of thymic T-cell differentiation. Insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF-2) is the dominant thymic polypeptide of the insulin family. Using fetal thymic organ cultures (FTOCs), the inhibition of thymic IGF-2-mediated signaling was shown to block the early stages of T-cell differentiation. The treatment of FTOCs with an mAb anti-(pro)insulin had no effect on T-cell development. In an animal model of autoimmune
type 1 diabetes
(BB rat), thymic levels of (pro)insulin and IGF-1 mRNAs were normal both in diabetes-resistant and diabetes-prone BB rats. IGF-2 transcripts were clearly identified in all thymuses from diabetes-resistant adult (5-week) and young (2- and 5-days) BB rats. In marked contrast, the IGF-2 transcripts were absent and the IGF-2 protein was almost undetectable in +/- 80% of the thymuses from diabetes-prone adult and young BB rats. These data show that a defect of the thymic IGF-2-mediated tolerogenic function might play an important role in the pathophysiology of autoimmune Type 1 diabetes.
...
PMID:Thymic neuroendocrine self-antigens. Role in T-cell development and central T-cell self-tolerance. 1126 99
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha and lymphotoxin (LT) alpha/beta play multiple roles in the development and function of the immune system. This article focuses on three important aspects of the effects of these cytokines on the immune response and on autoimmunity. In several experimental systems (Jurkat T cells, murine T-cell hybridomas), TNF-alpha appears to cause a downregulation of signaling through the TCR, revealed by changes in calcium flux, activation of p21, p23 and
ZAP70
, and a decrease in nuclear activation of NF-kappaB. Previous and present results suggest that TNF-alpha interferes in some manner with signaling through the TCR, at a locus yet to be delineated. Transgenic expression of LTbetaR-Fc in nonobese diabetic (NOD) transgenic mice results in prevention of
type 1 diabetes
in NOD mice as long as the level of expression of the fusion protein (under the control of the cytomegalovirus promoter) remains above a level of 2-3 microg/ml. Once the expression levels of the fusion protein have dropped below this critical level, the diabetic process resumes and the animals become diabetic at 40-50 weeks of age, whereas nontransgenic littermates develop diabetes by 25-30 weeks of age. The paradoxical effects of neonatal TNF-alpha administration in NOD mice in increasing incidence of and hastening onset of
type 1 diabetes
, while neonatal anti-TNF administration completely prevents all signs of islet cell autoimmunity, are due partly to the low levels of CD4+CD25+ T cells in NOD mice. These low levels are reduced by a further 50% on neonatal administration of nontoxic levels of TNF-alpha. In contrast, neonatal administration of anti-TNF-alpha results in a dramatic increase in the levels of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells, to levels beyond those seen in wild-type untreated NOD mice. TNF-alpha and LTalpha/beta thus have pleomorphic regulatory effects on the development and expression of autoimmunity.
...
PMID:Multiple roles for tumor necrosis factor-alpha and lymphotoxin alpha/beta in immunity and autoimmunity. 1211 Jan 33
Here we show that Janus kinase (JAK) 3 is an important molecular target for treatment of autoimmune insulin-dependent (type 1) diabetes mellitus. The rationally designed
JAK3
inhibitor JANEX-1 exhibited potent immunomodulatory activity and delayed the onset of diabetes in the NOD mouse model of autoimmune
type 1 diabetes
. Whereas 60% of vehicle-treated control NOD mice became diabetic by 25 weeks, the incidence of diabetes at 25 weeks was only 9% for NOD females treated with daily injections of JANEX-1 (100 mg/kg/day) from Week 10 through Week 25 (P = 0.007). Furthermore, JANEX-1 prevented the development of insulitis and diabetes in NOD-scid/scid females after adoptive transfer of splenocytes from diabetic NOD females. Chemical inhibitors such as JANEX-1 may provide the basis for effective treatment modalities against human
type 1 diabetes
. To our knowledge, this is the first report of the immunosuppressive activity of a
JAK3
inhibitor in the context of an autoimmune disease.
...
PMID:Targeting JAK3 with JANEX-1 for prevention of autoimmune type 1 diabetes in NOD mice. 1270 8
Exenatide (Ex-4) is an antidiabetic drug that acts through the glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor and has recently been approved for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Ex-4 also has been shown to affect beta cell gene expression and increase beta cell mass in rodent models of
type 1 diabetes
mellitus, but the mechanisms are not fully understood. We therefore analyzed the pathways affected by Ex-4 in human islets by using oligonucleotide microarrays and the PathwayStudio software (Ariadne Genomics, Rockville, MD). We identified the
JAK1
-STAT1 pathway as a novel target of Ex-4 and confirmed the Ex-4-mediated down-regulation of
JAK1
and STAT1 by quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction in human islets and INS-1 cells.
JAK1
-STAT1 is the major signaling pathway mediating the interferon gamma effects on beta cell apoptosis in
type 1 diabetes
mellitus. Thus, these findings suggest that Ex-4 treatment may also be beneficial in
type 1 diabetes
mellitus, where it may help protect beta cells from cytokine-induced cell death by inhibiting
JAK1
-STAT1.
...
PMID:Exenatide blocks JAK1-STAT1 in pancreatic beta cells. 1757 Feb 52
Insulin expression in the thymus has been implicated in regulating the negative selection of autoreactive T cells and in mediating the central immune tolerance towards pancreatic beta-cells. To further explore the function of this ectopic insulin expression, we knocked out the mouse Ins2 gene specifically in the Aire-expressing medullary thymic epithelial cells (mTECs), without affecting its expression in the beta-cells. When further crossed to the Ins1 knockout background, both male and female pups (designated as ID-TEC mice for insulin-deleted mTEC) developed diabetes spontaneously around 3 weeks after birth. beta-cell-specific autoimmune destruction was observed, as well as islet-specific T cell infiltration. The presence of insulin-specific effector T cells was shown using ELISPOT assays and adoptive T cell transfer experiments. Results from thymus transplantation experiments proved further that depletion of Ins2 expression in mTECs was sufficient to break central tolerance and induce anti-insulin autoimmunity. Our observations may explain the rare cases of
type 1 diabetes
onset in very young children carrying diabetes-resistant HLA class II alleles. ID-
TEC
mice could serve as a new model for studying this pathology.
...
PMID:Thymus-specific deletion of insulin induces autoimmune diabetes. 1975 22
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