Regenerative Medicine & Metabolic Biology, Indiana Biosciences Research Institute, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Diabetes Obes Metab. 2018 Aug;20(8):1859-1867. doi: 10.1111/dom.13298. Epub 2018 Apr 16.
Our current understanding of the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes (T1D) arose, in large part, from studies using the non-obese diabetic (NOD) mouse model. In the present study, we chose a human-focused method to investigate T1D disease mechanisms and potential targets for therapeutic intervention by directly analysing human donor pancreatic islets from individuals with T1D.
We obtained islets from a young individual with T1D for 3 years and from an older individual with T1D for 27 years and performed unbiased functional genomic analysis by high-depth RNA sequencing; the T1D islets were compared with islets isolated from 3 non-diabetic donors.
The islets procured from these T1D donors represent a unique opportunity to identify gene expression changes in islets after significantly different disease duration. Data analysis identified several inflammatory pathways up-regulated in short-duration disease, which notably included many components of innate immunity. As proof of concept for translation, one of the pathways, governed by IL-23(p19), was selected for further study in NOD mice because of ongoing human trials of biologics against this target for different indications. A mouse monoclonal antibody directed against IL-23(p19) when administered to NOD mice resulted in a significant reduction in incidence of diabetes.
While the sample size for this study is small, our data demonstrate that the direct analysis of human islets provides a greater understanding of human disease. These data, together with the analysis of an expanded cohort to be obtained by future collaborative efforts, might result in the identification of promising novel targets for translation into effective therapeutic interventions for human T1D, with the added benefit of repurposing known biologicals for use in different indications.
我们目前对 1 型糖尿病(T1D)发病机制的认识在很大程度上源于使用非肥胖型糖尿病(NOD)小鼠模型的研究。在本研究中,我们选择了一种以人类为中心的方法来研究 T1D 疾病机制和潜在的治疗干预靶点,直接分析来自 T1D 个体的人类供体胰岛。
我们从一位患有 T1D 3 年的年轻个体和一位患有 T1D 27 年的老年个体中获得胰岛,并通过高深度 RNA 测序进行无偏功能基因组分析;将 T1D 胰岛与从 3 名非糖尿病供体中分离的胰岛进行比较。
从这些 T1D 供体中获得的胰岛提供了一个独特的机会,可以在疾病持续时间显著不同的情况下鉴定胰岛中的基因表达变化。数据分析鉴定了几个在短病程中上调的炎症途径,其中许多途径包括先天免疫的许多成分。作为转化的概念验证,选择了其中一条途径(由 IL-23(p19) 调控)进行进一步研究,因为针对该靶点的生物制剂正在进行针对不同适应症的临床试验。在 NOD 小鼠中给予针对 IL-23(p19)的单克隆抗体可显著降低糖尿病的发生率。
虽然本研究的样本量较小,但我们的数据表明直接分析人类胰岛可以更好地了解人类疾病。这些数据,加上通过未来合作努力获得的扩展队列的分析,可能会确定有希望的新靶点,以转化为人类 T1D 的有效治疗干预措施,并且还可以重新利用已知的生物制剂用于不同的适应症。