Durinovic-Belló I
Diabetes Research Institute of the Academic Hospital München-Schwabing, Munich, Germany.
Autoimmunity. 1998;27(3):159-77. doi: 10.3109/08916939809003864.
Type 1 diabetes (IDDM) is a T cell mediated autoimmune disease which in part is determined genetically by its association with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II alleles. The major role of MHC molecules is the regulation of immune responses through the presentation of peptide epitopes of processed protein antigens to the immune system. Recently it has been demonstrated that MHC molecules associated with autoimmune diseases preferentially present peptides of other endogenous MHC proteins, that often mimic autoantigen-derived peptides. Hence, these MHC-derived peptides might represent potential targets for autoreactive T cells. It has consistently been shown that humoral autoimmunity to insulin predominantly occurs in early childhood. The cellular immune response to insulin is relatively low in the peripheral blood of patients with IDDM. Studies in NOD mice however have shown, that lymphocytes isolated from pancreatic islet infiltrates display a high reactivity to insulin and in particular to an insulin peptide B 9-23. Furthermore we have evidence that cellular autoimmunity to insulin is higher in young pre-diabetic individuals, whereas cellular reactivity to other autoantigens is equally distributed in younger and older subjects. This implicates that insulin, in human childhood IDDM and animal autoimmune diabetes, acts as an important early antigen which may target the autoimmune response to pancreatic beta cells. Moreover, we observed that in the vast majority of newly diagnosed diabetic patients or individuals at risk for IDDM, T cell reactivity to various autoantigens occurs simultaneously. In contrast, cellular reactivity to a single autoantigen is found with equal frequency in (pre)-type 1 diabetic individuals as well as in control subjects. Therefore the autoimmune response in the inductive phase of IDDM may be targeted to pancreatic islets by the cellular and humoral reactivity to one beta-cell specific autoantigen, but spreading to a set of different antigens may be a prerequisite for progression to destructive insulitis and clinical disease. Due to mimic epitopes shared by autoantigen(s), autologous MHC molecules and environmental antigens autoimmunity may spread, intramolecularly and intermolecularly and amplify upon repeated reexposure to mimic epitopes of environmental triggers.
1型糖尿病(IDDM)是一种由T细胞介导的自身免疫性疾病,部分由其与主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)II类等位基因的关联在遗传上决定。MHC分子的主要作用是通过将加工后的蛋白质抗原的肽表位呈递给免疫系统来调节免疫反应。最近已证明,与自身免疫性疾病相关的MHC分子优先呈递其他内源性MHC蛋白的肽,这些肽通常模拟自身抗原衍生的肽。因此,这些MHC衍生的肽可能代表自身反应性T细胞的潜在靶点。一直以来都表明,对胰岛素的体液自身免疫主要发生在儿童早期。IDDM患者外周血中对胰岛素的细胞免疫反应相对较低。然而,对非肥胖糖尿病(NOD)小鼠的研究表明,从胰岛浸润物中分离出的淋巴细胞对胰岛素,特别是对胰岛素肽B 9-23具有高反应性。此外,我们有证据表明,年轻的糖尿病前期个体对胰岛素的细胞自身免疫更高,而对其他自身抗原的细胞反应性在年轻和老年受试者中分布均匀。这意味着在人类儿童期IDDM和动物自身免疫性糖尿病中,胰岛素作为一种重要的早期抗原,可能针对胰腺β细胞的自身免疫反应。此外,我们观察到,在绝大多数新诊断的糖尿病患者或有IDDM风险的个体中,T细胞对各种自身抗原的反应同时发生。相比之下,在1型糖尿病前期个体以及对照受试者中,对单一自身抗原的细胞反应性出现频率相同。因此,IDDM诱导期的自身免疫反应可能通过对一种β细胞特异性自身抗原的细胞和体液反应靶向胰岛,但扩散到一组不同的抗原可能是进展为破坏性胰岛炎和临床疾病的先决条件。由于自身抗原、自体MHC分子和环境抗原共享模拟表位,自身免疫可能在分子内和分子间传播,并在反复重新暴露于环境触发因素的模拟表位时放大。