Protein Information

ID 830
Name IDDM
Synonyms IDDM; IDDM 1; IDDM1; IDDM 2; IDDM2; ILPR; insulin dependent diabetes mellitus 2; insulin dependent diabetes mellitus 2s

Compound Information

ID 1689
Name IAA
CAS

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
9165225 Schloot NC, Roep BO, Wegmann D, Yu L, Chase HP, Wang T, Eisenbarth GS: Altered immune response to insulin in newly diagnosed compared to insulin-treated diabetic patients and healthy control subjects. Diabetologia. 1997 May;40(5):564-72.
Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is the result of a T-cell mediated autoimmune beta-cell destruction, which is accompanied by autoantibodies. We analysed the cellular and humoral immune response to insulin and insulin peptides in patients with recent-onset IDDM, IDDM patients treated with insulin, non-diabetic first degree relatives and unrelated control subjects. There were no differences in T-cell reactivity to whole insulin or insulin peptides in general between age-matched groups of IDDM patients, relatives or healthy control subjects. In contrast to investigations in NOD mice, no immunodominant or disease-specific insulin peptide could be identified. Surprisingly, a positive correlation of T-cell responses to insulin with age was noticed (p < 0.005). This resulted in an inverse relation of insulin autoantibodies (IAA) and insulin reactive T-cells (p < 0.001) together with the well-described negative correlation of IAA with age. Interestingly, insulin-treated patients differed from age-matched recent-onset IDDM patients: first, simultaneous immune recognition of insulin with T-cells and IAA was only seen in patients treated for 6 months with insulin; second, insulin-treated patients rarely responded to whole insulin; third, they displayed less determinant spreading, and finally, recognition of multiple insulin peptides was not accompanied by crossreactivity to whole insulin. These distinct observations in insulin-treated IDDM patients, together with the inverse correlation between humoral and cellular responses to insulin, may result from activation or modulation of different T-cell subsets, and may be of relevance to insulin therapy trials, in which selective activation of non-destructive T-cell subsets may be a key to successful intervention.
3(0,0,0,3)