Schranz D B, Lernmark A
Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle 98195-7710, USA.
Diabetes Metab Rev. 1998 Mar;14(1):3-29. doi: 10.1002/(sici)1099-0895(199803)14:1<3::aid-dmr206>3.0.co;2-t.
Type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus is strongly associated with autoimmune phenomena connected to the loss of beta-cells in the pancreatic islets. Despite considerable progress in our understanding of genetic susceptibility factors and islet autoimmunity preceding the clinical onset of Type 1 diabetes there are considerable gaps in our knowledge. First, the etiology is unclear. It is speculated that multiple etiological factors may initiate a common pathogenic pathway which results in immune-mediated beta-cell destruction. In 1998 we will need to learn more about the possible importance of gestational infections, as well as isolation of viral DNA or RNA from the blood of new-onset patients or marker-positive individuals. The scan of the whole genome has provided a smorgasbord of genetic regions which confer diabetes risk either alone or in combination. HLA remains the major genetic risk factor, and while HLA peptide binding information is considerable, we understand less of autoantigen processing and presentation. Cloned autoantigens and their use in standardized autoantibody assays have improved our ability to identify individuals at risk for diabetes. The diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of autoantibody markers for Type 1 diabetes are high as are their predictive values. We need methods to combine autoantibodies with genetic risk factors. The identification of individuals in different stages of their pathogenesis, including patients with so-called slowly progressive Type 1 diabetes (SPIDDM, LADA etc.), allow approaches to novel therapeutic interventions. Insulin is currently the therapeutic agent of choice and although spontaneous insulin-dependent diabetes in the NOD mouse and the BB rat can be prevented by immune suppression or modulation, this has not yet been possible in humans. The 1998 research on the interaction between environmental factors and susceptibility genes to initiate beta-cell specific autoreactivity should allow the development of therapies for prevention, and perhaps a cure, of insulin-dependent (Type 1) diabetes.
1型(胰岛素依赖型)糖尿病与胰岛β细胞丧失相关的自身免疫现象密切相关。尽管我们在了解1型糖尿病临床发病前的遗传易感性因素和胰岛自身免疫方面取得了相当大的进展,但我们的知识仍存在相当大的差距。首先,病因尚不清楚。据推测,多种病因因素可能启动一条共同的致病途径,导致免疫介导的β细胞破坏。1998年,我们需要更多地了解妊娠感染的可能重要性,以及从新发病患者或标志物阳性个体的血液中分离病毒DNA或RNA。全基因组扫描提供了一系列单独或组合起来会增加糖尿病风险的基因区域。HLA仍然是主要的遗传风险因素,虽然HLA肽结合信息很多,但我们对自身抗原加工和呈递的了解较少。克隆的自身抗原及其在标准化自身抗体检测中的应用提高了我们识别糖尿病高危个体的能力。1型糖尿病自身抗体标志物的诊断敏感性、特异性及其预测价值都很高。我们需要将自身抗体与遗传风险因素结合起来的方法。识别处于发病不同阶段的个体,包括所谓的缓慢进展性1型糖尿病(SPIDDM、成人隐匿性自身免疫糖尿病等)患者,有助于采取新的治疗干预措施。胰岛素是目前的首选治疗药物,虽然通过免疫抑制或调节可以预防非肥胖糖尿病小鼠和BB大鼠的自发性胰岛素依赖型糖尿病,但在人类中尚未实现。1998年关于环境因素与易感基因相互作用引发β细胞特异性自身反应性的研究应能促进预防甚至治愈胰岛素依赖型(1型)糖尿病的疗法的开发。