Central Laboratory, Shaanxi Provincial People's Hospital, the Third Affiliated Hospital of the Medical College of Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, China.
Department of Endocrinology, Xi'an Children's Hospital, Xi'an, China.
J Diabetes Investig. 2018 Mar;9(2):265-269. doi: 10.1111/jdi.12690. Epub 2017 Jul 4.
Epidemiological studies have documented that the incidence of human type 1 diabetes was significantly increased after H1N1 epidemic. However, a direct link between human type 1 diabetes and virus infection remains elusive. We generated 84 clones of murine monoclonal antibodies against the H1N1, and carried out immunohistochemistry in normal human tissue microarray. The results showed that two clones specifically cross-reacted with human α-cells of pancreatic islets. Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction and deoxyribonucleic acid sequencing showed that the amino acid sequences of light and heavy chains of these clones were different. Importantly, the expression profiles of two monoclonal antibodies were individual different. For the first time, we provide direct evidence that monoclonal antibodies against H1N1 can cross-react with human pancreas α-cells, another source of β-cells, suggesting α-cells might be a novel target to be investigated in diabetes research.
流行病学研究表明,人类 1 型糖尿病的发病率在 H1N1 大流行后显著增加。然而,人类 1 型糖尿病与病毒感染之间的直接联系仍难以捉摸。我们生成了 84 株针对 H1N1 的鼠源性单克隆抗体,并在正常人类组织微阵列中进行了免疫组织化学染色。结果表明,有两个克隆可特异性与胰岛的人α细胞发生交叉反应。逆转录聚合酶链反应和脱氧核糖核酸测序显示,这些克隆的轻链和重链的氨基酸序列不同。重要的是,两种单克隆抗体的表达谱存在个体差异。我们首次提供了直接证据,表明针对 H1N1 的单克隆抗体可与人胰腺α细胞发生交叉反应,而α细胞是β细胞的另一个来源,这提示α细胞可能是糖尿病研究中值得探索的新靶点。