Ono Junko
Department of Laboratory Medicine, School of Medicine, Fukuoka University, Fukuoka 814-0180.
Rinsho Byori. 2006 Apr;54(4):379-85.
Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease with selective destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells. Since insulin plays pivotal roles in energy homeostasis by transferring glucose into cells, type 1 diabetic patients can not survive without insulin replacement. Insulin secretion is precisely controlled by ingested glucose as well as hormones and neural factors, therefore it is impossible to reproduce the physiological secretory pattern of insulin via exogenous insulin, even by multiple or continuous delivery by injection. Transplantation of beta cells has long been expected as the fundamental treatment to cure type 1 diabetics, and transplantation of the whole pancreas, both exocrine pancreas and islets, has been applied with success, resulting insulin independence. However, the exocrine pancreas, which releases amylase and trypsin to the digestive tract, is not indispensable for insulin replacement, so the interest in islet transplantation has increased enormously. In the past 20 years, the techniques for isolating large numbers of human islets have been advanced and more potent immunosuppressive agents have also been introduced, permitting newer attempts at islet transplantation. In 2000, insulin independence was first achieved in Canada using the Edmonton protocol. The success rates have increased gradually using this protocol, and 5 institutes in Japan have started to prepare human islet transplantation under the control of the Japan Pancreas and Islet Transplant Society. In 2004, insulin independence by islet transplantation was first achieved at Kyoto University Hospital and the number of islet transplantations has increased, though very slowly. By the end of 2005, approximately 100 patients were on the waiting list for islet transplantation in Japan. Many problems remain unsolved in islet transplantation to meet clinical practice: these are the shortage of insulin-producing cells, further progress in immunosuppressive agents that do not interfere with insulin secretion, strategies for protecting islets against hypoxia, and/or non-immunological damage such as mechanical damage soon after transplantation, and the destruction of islet cells by innate immunity. We investigated the role of neutrophil leucocytes infiltrating the liver using natural killer cell-knock-out mice and proposed a new strategy for protecting transplanted islets from non-specific damage, which occurs within one day after transplantation.
1型糖尿病是一种自身免疫性疾病,其特征是胰岛素分泌胰腺β细胞被选择性破坏。由于胰岛素通过将葡萄糖转运到细胞中在能量稳态中发挥关键作用,1型糖尿病患者如果不进行胰岛素替代就无法生存。胰岛素分泌受到摄入的葡萄糖以及激素和神经因素的精确控制,因此,即使通过多次或连续注射外源性胰岛素,也不可能重现胰岛素的生理分泌模式。长期以来,β细胞移植一直被视为治愈1型糖尿病的根本治疗方法,全胰腺移植,包括外分泌胰腺和胰岛移植,已经取得成功,使患者实现了胰岛素自主分泌。然而,向消化道释放淀粉酶和胰蛋白酶的外分泌胰腺对于胰岛素替代并非不可或缺,因此对胰岛移植的兴趣大幅增加。在过去20年中,分离大量人胰岛的技术取得了进展,同时也引入了更有效的免疫抑制剂,使得胰岛移植有了新的尝试。2000年,加拿大首次使用埃德蒙顿方案实现了胰岛素自主分泌。使用该方案的成功率逐渐提高,日本有5家机构在日本胰腺和胰岛移植协会的控制下开始准备进行人胰岛移植。2004年,京都大学医院首次通过胰岛移植实现了胰岛素自主分泌,胰岛移植的数量有所增加,尽管增长非常缓慢。到2005年底,日本约有100名患者在等待胰岛移植。胰岛移植要满足临床实践仍有许多问题尚未解决:这些问题包括胰岛素产生细胞的短缺、不干扰胰岛素分泌的免疫抑制剂的进一步进展、保护胰岛免受缺氧和/或移植后不久的机械损伤等非免疫性损伤以及先天免疫对胰岛细胞的破坏。我们使用自然杀伤细胞敲除小鼠研究了浸润肝脏的中性粒细胞的作用,并提出了一种保护移植胰岛免受移植后一天内发生的非特异性损伤的新策略。