Faustman D L
Immunobiology Laboratories, Harvard Medical School, Charlestown, MA 02129.
Diabete Metab. 1993 Sep-Oct;19(5):446-57.
Individuals with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, as well as high-risk prediabetic subjects who are identified prior to the onset of hyperglycaemia by abnormal autoantibodies to both insulin and islet cells have an autologous antigen presenting cell (APC) defect that results in sluggish T cell proliferation in the in vitro autologous mixed lymphocyte reaction (AMLR). In contrast, lower-risk relatives, who produce autoantibodies restricted to insulin and fail to develop overt hyperglycaemia, show apparently normal autologous antigen presenting cell function and paradoxically demonstrate excessive T cell proliferation in the AMLR. We have now characterized this lower-risk vigorous T cell response in the autologous mixed by lymphocyte reaction as a predominant and excessive proliferation of CD4+ T cells to self-antigens (n = 10, p < 0.001). In addition, the normal autologously driven transition of the expanding CD45RA+ subset of CD4+ cells into transient CD45RA+RO+ cells with subsequent progression to CD45RA-RO+ cells is partially blocked in the lower-risk autologous response compared to controls (n = 5, p = 0.01, respectively). Autologously driven T cell developmental transitions also appear to be blocked in these individuals in vitro; the peripheral blood of lower-risk relatives contains an increased number of CD4+ cells abnormally coexpressing CD45RA and CD45RO (p = 0.01). Interestingly, in two twin sets reconstitution of T cells from the diabetic twin of an identical twin-pair that is discordant for Type 1 diabetes with the APCs of the nondiabetic twin resulted in overly vigorous T cell proliferation dominated by CD4+ cells; phenotypically, these CD4+ cells at the end of the reaction were similar to those of lower-risk relatives in that the CD45RA+RO+ transition into CD45RA-RO+ cells was now observed to be defective. Therefore, T cells from lower-risk relatives and individuals with Type 1 diabetes appear to possess similar intrinsic T cell developmental defects in CD45 transitions that are apparent after normal autologous antigen stimulation.
胰岛素依赖型糖尿病患者,以及通过胰岛素和胰岛细胞自身抗体异常在高血糖发作前被识别的高危糖尿病前期受试者,存在自体抗原呈递细胞(APC)缺陷,这导致体外自体混合淋巴细胞反应(AMLR)中T细胞增殖缓慢。相比之下,产生仅限于胰岛素的自身抗体且未发展为明显高血糖的低危亲属,显示出自体抗原呈递细胞功能明显正常,且在AMLR中出现矛盾的过度T细胞增殖。我们现在将这种低危的自体混合淋巴细胞反应中活跃的T细胞反应特征化为CD4+T细胞对自身抗原的主要且过度增殖(n = 10,p < 0.001)。此外,与对照组相比,低危自体反应中,CD4+细胞的扩增CD45RA+亚群向短暂的CD45RA+RO+细胞的正常自体驱动转变以及随后向CD45RA-RO+细胞的进展部分受阻(分别为n = 5,p = 0.01)。体外这些个体中自体驱动的T细胞发育转变似乎也受阻;低危亲属的外周血中异常共表达CD45RA和CD45RO的CD4+细胞数量增加(p = 0.01)。有趣的是,在两对同卵双胞胎中,将1型糖尿病不一致的同卵双胞胎中糖尿病双胞胎的T细胞与非糖尿病双胞胎的APC进行重建,导致以CD4+细胞为主的过度活跃的T细胞增殖;从表型上看,反应结束时这些CD4+细胞与低危亲属的细胞相似,因为现在观察到CD45RA+RO+向CD45RA-RO+细胞的转变存在缺陷。因此,低危亲属和1型糖尿病患者的T细胞在正常自体抗原刺激后,在CD45转变方面似乎具有相似的内在T细胞发育缺陷。