Itoh Arata, Ridgway William M
Division of Immunology, Allergy and Rheumatology, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH, USA.
Immunotargets Ther. 2017 May 19;6:31-38. doi: 10.2147/ITT.S117264. eCollection 2017.
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is characterized by specific destruction of pancreatic insulin-producing beta cells accompanied by evidence of beta-cell-directed autoimmunity such as autoreactive T cells and islet autoantibodies (IAAs). Currently, T1D cannot be prevented or reversed in humans. T1D is easy to prevent in the nonobese diabetic (NOD) spontaneous mouse model but reversing new-onset T1D in mice is more difficult. Since the discovery of the T-cell receptor in the 1980s and the subsequent identification of autoreactive T cells directed toward beta-cell antigens (eg, insulin, glutamic acid decarboxylase), the dream of antigen-specific immunotherapy has dominated the field with its promise of specificity and limited side effects. While such approaches have worked in the NOD mouse, however, dozens of human trials have failed. Broader immunosuppressive approaches (originally cyclosporine, subsequently anti-CD3 antibody) have shown partial successes (e.g., prolonged C peptide preservation) but no major therapeutic efficacy or disease reversal. Human prevention trials have failed, despite the ease of such approaches in the NOD mouse. In the past 50 years, the incidence of T1D has increased dramatically, and one explanation is the "hygiene hypothesis", which suggests that decreased exposure of the innate immune system to environmental immune stimulants (e.g., bacterial products such as Toll-like receptor (TLR) 4-stimulating lipopolysaccharide [LPS]) dramatically affects the adaptive immune system and increases subsequent autoimmunity. We have tested the role of innate immunity in autoimmune T1D by treating acute-onset T1D in NOD mice with anti-TLR4/MD-2 agonistic antibodies and have shown a high rate of disease reversal. The TLR4 antibodies do not directly stimulate T cells but induce tolerogenic antigen-presenting cells (APCs) that mediate decreased adaptive T-cell responses. Here, we review our current knowledge and suggest future prospects for targeting innate immunity in T1D immunotherapy.
1型糖尿病(T1D)的特征是胰腺中产生胰岛素的β细胞发生特异性破坏,并伴有β细胞定向自身免疫的证据,如自身反应性T细胞和胰岛自身抗体(IAA)。目前,T1D在人类中无法预防或逆转。T1D在非肥胖糖尿病(NOD)自发小鼠模型中很容易预防,但逆转小鼠新发的T1D则更困难。自20世纪80年代发现T细胞受体以及随后鉴定出针对β细胞抗原(如胰岛素、谷氨酸脱羧酶)的自身反应性T细胞以来,抗原特异性免疫疗法的梦想以其特异性和有限副作用的前景主导了该领域。然而,虽然这种方法在NOD小鼠中有效,但数十项人体试验都失败了。更广泛的免疫抑制方法(最初是环孢素,随后是抗CD3抗体)已显示出部分成功(例如,延长C肽保存时间),但没有显著的治疗效果或疾病逆转。尽管在NOD小鼠中这种方法很容易实现,但人类预防试验也失败了。在过去50年中,T1D的发病率急剧上升,一种解释是“卫生假说”,该假说认为先天免疫系统与环境免疫刺激物(如Toll样受体(TLR)4刺激脂多糖[LPS]等细菌产物)的接触减少,会极大地影响适应性免疫系统,并增加随后的自身免疫。我们通过用抗TLR4/MD-2激动性抗体治疗NOD小鼠的急性发作T1D,测试了先天免疫在自身免疫性T1D中的作用,并显示出较高的疾病逆转率。TLR4抗体不会直接刺激T细胞,而是诱导产生耐受性抗原呈递细胞(APC),介导适应性T细胞反应降低。在此,我们回顾我们目前的知识,并提出T1D免疫疗法中针对先天免疫的未来前景。