Rood Pleunie P M, Bottino Rita, Balamurugan A N, Fan Yong, Cooper David K C, Trucco Massimo
Division of Immunogenetics, Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Pharm Res. 2006 Feb;23(2):227-42. doi: 10.1007/s11095-005-9095-6. Epub 2006 Jan 1.
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disease, the clinical onset of which most frequently presents in children and adolescents who are genetically predisposed. T1D is characterized by specific insulin-producing beta cell destruction. The well-differentiated and specialized islet beta cells seem to physiologically retain the ability to compensate for the cells lost by reproducing themselves, whereas undifferentiated cell sources may help in generating new ones, even while the autoimmune process takes place. Diabetes clinical onset, i.e., establishment of a detectable, chronic hyperglycemia, occurs at a critical stage when autoimmunity, having acted for a while, supersedes the regenerative effort and reduces the number of beta cells below the physiologic threshold at which the produced insulin becomes insufficient for the body's needs. Clinical solutions aimed at avoiding cumbersome daily insulin administrations by the reestablishment of physiologic insulin production, like whole pancreas or pancreatic islet allotransplantation, are limited by the scarcity of pancreas donors and by the toxic effects of the immunosuppressive drugs administered to prevent rejection. However, new accumulating evidence suggests that, once autoimmunity is abrogated, the endocrine pancreas properties may be sufficient to allow the physiological regenerative process to restore endogenous insulin production, even after the disease has become clinically manifest. Knowledge of these properties of the endocrine pancreas suggests the testing of reliable and clinically translatable protocols for obliterating autoimmunity, thus allowing the regeneration of the patient's own endocrine cells. The safe induction of an autoimmunity-free status might become a new promising therapy for T1D.
1型糖尿病(T1D)是一种自身免疫性疾病,其临床发病最常见于具有遗传易感性的儿童和青少年。T1D的特征是特定的产生胰岛素的β细胞被破坏。分化良好且特化的胰岛β细胞在生理上似乎保留了通过自我复制来补偿丢失细胞的能力,而未分化的细胞来源可能有助于产生新的细胞,即使在自身免疫过程发生时也是如此。糖尿病临床发病,即可检测到的慢性高血糖的出现,发生在一个关键阶段,此时自身免疫作用一段时间后,超过了再生努力,使β细胞数量减少到生理阈值以下,此时产生的胰岛素不足以满足身体的需求。旨在通过重建生理性胰岛素分泌来避免繁琐的每日胰岛素注射的临床解决方案,如全胰腺或胰岛同种异体移植,受到胰腺供体稀缺以及为防止排斥反应而使用的免疫抑制药物的毒性作用的限制。然而,新出现的越来越多的证据表明,一旦自身免疫被消除,即使在疾病已出现临床症状后,内分泌胰腺的特性可能足以使生理再生过程恢复内源性胰岛素分泌。对内分泌胰腺这些特性的了解提示了对消除自身免疫的可靠且可临床转化的方案进行测试,从而使患者自身的内分泌细胞得以再生。安全诱导无自身免疫状态可能成为T1D一种新的有前景的治疗方法。