Itariu Bianca K, Stulnig Thomas M
Christian Doppler Laboratory for Cardio-Metabolic Immunotherapy, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Gerontology. 2014;60(3):189-96. doi: 10.1159/000356747. Epub 2014 Jan 22.
Autoimmunity is a well-known pathogenic component in type 1 diabetes (T1DM). The assumption that the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes (T2DM) also encompasses autoimmune aspects is recognized increasingly, based on the presence of circulating autoantibodies against β cells, self-reactive T cells, but also on the glucose-lowering efficacy of some immunomodulatory therapies in T2DM. The identification of these autoantibodies in elderly patients with slowly progressive manifestation of diabetes led to the introduction of a distinct clinical entity termed latent autoimmune diabetes of the adult (LADA), which combines features of both T1DM and T2DM. The autoantibody cluster differs in patients with LADA from patients with T1DM, but their presence indicates steady progression towards β-cell death and subsequent need for initiation of insulin treatment in a shorter period of time compared to autoantibody-negative T2DM patients. Autoimmune aspects in T2DM are not solely restricted to autoantibodies and thus LADA. They include the self-reactive T cells or defects in regulatory T cells (Tregs), which have been detected in autoantibody-negative T2DM patients as well. One contributor to the autoimmune activation in T2DM seems to be the chronic inflammatory state, characteristic of this disease. Upon inflammation-induced tissue destruction, cryptic 'self' antigens can trigger an autoimmune response, which in turn accelerates β-cell death. Both innate and adaptive immune system components, specifically macrophages and self-reactive T cells, contribute to an increased secretion of inflammatory cytokines involved in inflammatory and autoimmune processes. However, the extent to which inflammation overlaps with autoimmunity is not known. Our review focuses on autoimmune involvement in T2DM, with an emphasis on LADA and the humoral immune response, on the involvement of chronic inflammation in autoimmunity, and specifically the role of B and T cells as links between inflammatory and autoimmune reactions. We will further stress the consequences of autoimmune activation for T2DM patients and present novel therapeutic approaches for T2DM management that rely on immune modulation.
自身免疫是1型糖尿病(T1DM)中一个众所周知的致病因素。基于针对β细胞的循环自身抗体、自身反应性T细胞的存在,以及一些免疫调节疗法在2型糖尿病(T2DM)中的降糖效果,越来越多的人认识到2型糖尿病的发病机制也包括自身免疫方面。在患有缓慢进展性糖尿病的老年患者中发现这些自身抗体后,引入了一种独特的临床实体,称为成人隐匿性自身免疫性糖尿病(LADA),它兼具T1DM和T2DM的特征。LADA患者的自身抗体簇与T1DM患者不同,但其存在表明与自身抗体阴性的T2DM患者相比,会更快地向β细胞死亡发展,随后需要在更短的时间内开始胰岛素治疗。T2DM中的自身免疫方面不仅限于自身抗体,因此也不仅限于LADA。它们还包括自身反应性T细胞或调节性T细胞(Tregs)缺陷,在自身抗体阴性的T2DM患者中也检测到了这些情况。T2DM中自身免疫激活的一个促成因素似乎是这种疾病特有的慢性炎症状态。在炎症诱导的组织破坏后,隐蔽的“自身”抗原可引发自身免疫反应,进而加速β细胞死亡。先天性和适应性免疫系统成分,特别是巨噬细胞和自身反应性T细胞,会导致参与炎症和自身免疫过程的炎性细胞因子分泌增加。然而,炎症与自身免疫重叠的程度尚不清楚。我们的综述重点关注自身免疫在T2DM中的作用,重点是LADA和体液免疫反应、慢性炎症在自身免疫中的作用,特别是B细胞和T细胞作为炎症和自身免疫反应之间联系的作用。我们还将进一步强调自身免疫激活对T2DM患者的影响,并提出依赖免疫调节的T2DM管理新治疗方法。