Clinic for Applied Cellular Therapy (CACT), University of Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, 24105 Kiel, Germany.
Adv Exp Med Biol. 2010;654:641-65. doi: 10.1007/978-90-481-3271-3_28.
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D) is considered a classical autoimmune disease which commonly starts during childhood but may appear later in adulthood in a proportion of 30-40% of affected individuals. Its development is based on a combination of a genetic predisposition and autoimmune processes that result in gradual destruction of the beta-cells of the pancreas and cause absolute insulin deficiency. Evidence for an autoimmune origin of T1D results from measurable islet beta-cell autoantibody directed against various autoantigens such as proinsulin or insulin itself, glutamic acid decarboxylase 65, the islet tyrosine phosphatase IA-2, and the islet-specific glucose-6-phosphatase catalytic subunit-related protein. In addition, T-cell lines with specificity for insulin or glutamic acid decarboxylase have been identified within peripheral blood lymphocytes. Importantly, in most instances the pathogenesis of T1D comprises a slowly progressive destruction of beta-cell tissue in the pancreas preceded by several years of a prediabetic phase where autoimmunity has already developed but with no clinically apparent insulin dependency. Unless immunological tolerance to pancreatic autoantigens is re-established, diabetes treated by islet cell transplantation or stimulation/regeneration of endogenous beta-cells would remain a chronic disease secondary to immune suppression related morbidity. Hence, if islet cell tolerance could be re-induced, a major clinical hurdle to curing diabetes by islet cell neogenesis may be overcome. Targeted immunotherapies are currently explored in a variety of clinical studies and hold great promise for causative treatment to readjust the underlying immunologic imbalance with the goal to cure the disease. This chapter will outline possible treatment options to stop or reverse the beta-cell-specific autoimmune and inflammatory process within pancreatic islets. Special emphasis is given to stem cells of embryonic, mesenchymal, and haematopoietic origin, which, besides their use for regenerative purposes, possess potent immunomodulatory functions and thus have the potential to suppress the autoimmune response. At the end of this chapter we will introduce a novel type of in vitro modified monocytes with immunosuppressive and anti-inflammatory properties. These tolerogenic monocytes provide a feasible option to be used as autologous cellular transplants to halt autoimmunity and to protect still viable beta-cells within Langerhans islets.
1 型糖尿病(T1D)被认为是一种经典的自身免疫性疾病,通常在儿童时期发病,但在 30-40%的患者中也可能在成年后发病。其发病机制是遗传易感性和自身免疫过程的结合,导致胰腺β细胞逐渐破坏,并导致绝对胰岛素缺乏。T1D 的自身免疫起源证据来自于针对各种自身抗原(如胰岛素原或胰岛素本身、谷氨酸脱羧酶 65、胰岛酪氨酸磷酸酶 IA-2 和胰岛特异性葡萄糖-6-磷酸酶催化亚基相关蛋白)的可测量胰岛β细胞自身抗体。此外,在外周血淋巴细胞中已经鉴定出针对胰岛素或谷氨酸脱羧酶的 T 细胞系。重要的是,在大多数情况下,T1D 的发病机制包括胰腺β细胞组织的缓慢进行性破坏,在此之前数年已经发生了糖尿病前期阶段,此时自身免疫已经发展,但没有明显的临床胰岛素依赖。除非重新建立对胰腺自身抗原的免疫耐受,否则通过胰岛细胞移植或刺激/再生内源性β细胞治疗的糖尿病仍将是一种与免疫抑制相关发病率相关的慢性疾病。因此,如果可以重新诱导胰岛细胞耐受,通过胰岛细胞新生来治愈糖尿病的主要临床障碍可能会被克服。靶向免疫疗法目前正在各种临床研究中进行探索,为调整潜在的免疫失衡以达到治愈疾病的目的提供了有希望的治疗方法。本章将概述阻止或逆转胰岛内β细胞特异性自身免疫和炎症过程的可能治疗选择。特别强调胚胎、间充质和造血来源的干细胞,除了用于再生目的外,还具有强大的免疫调节功能,因此有可能抑制自身免疫反应。在本章的最后,我们将介绍一种新型体外修饰的具有免疫抑制和抗炎特性的单核细胞。这些免疫耐受的单核细胞为作为自体细胞移植提供了可行的选择,以阻止自身免疫并保护朗格汉斯胰岛内仍存活的β细胞。