Herold Kevan C, Usmani-Brown Sahar, Ghazi Tara, Lebastchi Jasmin, Beam Craig A, Bellin Melena D, Ledizet Michel, Sosenko Jay M, Krischer Jeffrey P, Palmer Jerry P
J Clin Invest. 2015 Mar 2;125(3):1163-73. doi: 10.1172/JCI78142. Epub 2015 Feb 2.
Role of the funding source: Funding from the NIH was used for support of the participating clinical centers and the coordinating center. The funding source did not participate in the collection or the analysis of the data.
The β cell killing that characterizes type 1 diabetes (T1D) is thought to begin years before patients present clinically with metabolic decompensation; however, this primary pathologic process of the disease has not been measured.
Here, we measured β cell death with an assay that detects β cell-derived unmethylated insulin (INS) DNA. Using this assay, we performed an observational study of 50 participants from 2 cohorts at risk for developing T1D from the TrialNet Pathway to Prevention study and of 4 subjects who received islet autotransplants.
In at-risk subjects, those who progressed to T1D had average levels of unmethylated INS DNA that were elevated modestly compared with those of healthy control subjects. In at-risk individuals that progressed to T1D, the observed increases in unmethylated INS DNA were associated with decreases in insulin secretion, indicating that the changes in unmethylated INS DNA are indicative of β cell killing. Subjects at high risk for T1D had levels of unmethylated INS DNA that were higher than those of healthy controls and higher than the levels of unmethylated INS DNA in the at-risk progressor and at-risk nonprogressor groups followed for 4 years. Evaluation of insulin secretory kinetics also distinguished high-risk subjects who progressed to overt disease from those who did not.
We conclude that a blood test that measures unmethylated INS DNA serves as a marker of active β cell killing as the result of T1D-associated autoimmunity. Together, the data support the concept that β cell killing occurs sporadically during the years prior to diagnosis of T1D and is more intense in the peridiagnosis period.
Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00097292.
Funding was from the NIH, the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, and the American Diabetes Association.
资金来源的作用:美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)的资金用于支持参与的临床中心和协调中心。资金来源未参与数据的收集或分析。
1型糖尿病(T1D)的特征性β细胞杀伤被认为在患者临床出现代谢失代偿前数年就已开始;然而,该疾病的这一主要病理过程尚未得到测量。
在此,我们使用一种检测β细胞衍生的未甲基化胰岛素(INS)DNA的检测方法来测量β细胞死亡。使用该检测方法,我们对来自TrialNet预防途径研究中2个有发展为T1D风险队列的50名参与者以及4名接受胰岛自体移植的受试者进行了一项观察性研究。
在有风险的受试者中,进展为T1D的受试者的未甲基化INS DNA平均水平与健康对照受试者相比有适度升高。在进展为T1D的有风险个体中,观察到的未甲基化INS DNA增加与胰岛素分泌减少相关,表明未甲基化INS DNA的变化指示β细胞杀伤。T1D高风险受试者的未甲基化INS DNA水平高于健康对照者以及随访4年的有风险进展者和有风险非进展者组的未甲基化INS DNA水平。对胰岛素分泌动力学的评估也区分了进展为显性疾病的高风险受试者和未进展者。
我们得出结论,一种测量未甲基化INS DNA的血液检测可作为T1D相关自身免疫导致的活性β细胞杀伤的标志物。总之,数据支持这样的概念,即β细胞杀伤在T1D诊断前数年偶尔发生,且在诊断期更为强烈。
Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00097292。
资金来自美国国立卫生研究院、青少年糖尿病研究基金会和美国糖尿病协会。