Relationship between T and B cell responses to proinsulin in human type 1 diabetes.

Standard

Relationship between T and B cell responses to proinsulin in human type 1 diabetes. / Durinovic-Belló, Ivana; Maisel, Nicola; Schlosser, Michael; Kalbacher, Hubert; Deeg, Martin; Eiermann, Thomas; Karges, Wolfram; Boehm, Bernhard O.

in: ANN NY ACAD SCI, Jahrgang 1005, 2003, S. 288-294.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Durinovic-Belló, I, Maisel, N, Schlosser, M, Kalbacher, H, Deeg, M, Eiermann, T, Karges, W & Boehm, BO 2003, 'Relationship between T and B cell responses to proinsulin in human type 1 diabetes.', ANN NY ACAD SCI, Jg. 1005, S. 288-294. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14679078?dopt=Citation>

APA

Durinovic-Belló, I., Maisel, N., Schlosser, M., Kalbacher, H., Deeg, M., Eiermann, T., Karges, W., & Boehm, B. O. (2003). Relationship between T and B cell responses to proinsulin in human type 1 diabetes. ANN NY ACAD SCI, 1005, 288-294. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14679078?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Durinovic-Belló I, Maisel N, Schlosser M, Kalbacher H, Deeg M, Eiermann T et al. Relationship between T and B cell responses to proinsulin in human type 1 diabetes. ANN NY ACAD SCI. 2003;1005:288-294.

Bibtex

@article{982e58a4d5804c93aabdb202198153cc,
title = "Relationship between T and B cell responses to proinsulin in human type 1 diabetes.",
abstract = "In type 1 diabetes, humoral and cell-mediated responses to insulin and proinsulin are detectable. Autoantibodies to insulin are associated with impending disease in young individuals and are used as predictive markers to determine disease risk. The aim of this study was to investigate whether different cytokine patterns of cellular reactivity to insulin might serve as additional specific markers of disease maturation and might improve disease prediction in individuals at risk. We correlated T and B cell responses to insulin in subjects with increased genetic risk (HLA-DRB1*04, DQB1*0302) for diabetes with or without islet autoantibodies (Ab+ subjects and controls, respectively) and HLA-matched patients. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were stimulated with 15 overlapping proinsulin peptides (16-mer), and proinflammatory Th1 (IFNgamma) and anti-inflammatory Th2 (IL-4) cytokines were analyzed. We observed a simultaneous increase in IL-4 and IFNgamma secretion in early islet autoimmunity of Ab+ subjects, but not in insulin-treated T1D patients. Furthermore, the increase in IL-4 secretion in Ab+ subjects was associated with insulin autoantibody responses. There was no correlation of either IFNgamma or IL-4 secretion with insulin antibody responses in patients already treated with exogenous insulin. In conclusion, our findings reveal that quantification of cytokine responses to proinsulin in peripheral blood may prove to be a promising specific marker of diabetes progression and could, in addition to insulin autoantibodies, be used in the prediction of type 1 diabetes.",
author = "Ivana Durinovic-Bell{\'o} and Nicola Maisel and Michael Schlosser and Hubert Kalbacher and Martin Deeg and Thomas Eiermann and Wolfram Karges and Boehm, {Bernhard O}",
year = "2003",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "1005",
pages = "288--294",
journal = "ANN NY ACAD SCI",
issn = "0077-8923",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Relationship between T and B cell responses to proinsulin in human type 1 diabetes.

AU - Durinovic-Belló, Ivana

AU - Maisel, Nicola

AU - Schlosser, Michael

AU - Kalbacher, Hubert

AU - Deeg, Martin

AU - Eiermann, Thomas

AU - Karges, Wolfram

AU - Boehm, Bernhard O

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - In type 1 diabetes, humoral and cell-mediated responses to insulin and proinsulin are detectable. Autoantibodies to insulin are associated with impending disease in young individuals and are used as predictive markers to determine disease risk. The aim of this study was to investigate whether different cytokine patterns of cellular reactivity to insulin might serve as additional specific markers of disease maturation and might improve disease prediction in individuals at risk. We correlated T and B cell responses to insulin in subjects with increased genetic risk (HLA-DRB1*04, DQB1*0302) for diabetes with or without islet autoantibodies (Ab+ subjects and controls, respectively) and HLA-matched patients. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were stimulated with 15 overlapping proinsulin peptides (16-mer), and proinflammatory Th1 (IFNgamma) and anti-inflammatory Th2 (IL-4) cytokines were analyzed. We observed a simultaneous increase in IL-4 and IFNgamma secretion in early islet autoimmunity of Ab+ subjects, but not in insulin-treated T1D patients. Furthermore, the increase in IL-4 secretion in Ab+ subjects was associated with insulin autoantibody responses. There was no correlation of either IFNgamma or IL-4 secretion with insulin antibody responses in patients already treated with exogenous insulin. In conclusion, our findings reveal that quantification of cytokine responses to proinsulin in peripheral blood may prove to be a promising specific marker of diabetes progression and could, in addition to insulin autoantibodies, be used in the prediction of type 1 diabetes.

AB - In type 1 diabetes, humoral and cell-mediated responses to insulin and proinsulin are detectable. Autoantibodies to insulin are associated with impending disease in young individuals and are used as predictive markers to determine disease risk. The aim of this study was to investigate whether different cytokine patterns of cellular reactivity to insulin might serve as additional specific markers of disease maturation and might improve disease prediction in individuals at risk. We correlated T and B cell responses to insulin in subjects with increased genetic risk (HLA-DRB1*04, DQB1*0302) for diabetes with or without islet autoantibodies (Ab+ subjects and controls, respectively) and HLA-matched patients. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were stimulated with 15 overlapping proinsulin peptides (16-mer), and proinflammatory Th1 (IFNgamma) and anti-inflammatory Th2 (IL-4) cytokines were analyzed. We observed a simultaneous increase in IL-4 and IFNgamma secretion in early islet autoimmunity of Ab+ subjects, but not in insulin-treated T1D patients. Furthermore, the increase in IL-4 secretion in Ab+ subjects was associated with insulin autoantibody responses. There was no correlation of either IFNgamma or IL-4 secretion with insulin antibody responses in patients already treated with exogenous insulin. In conclusion, our findings reveal that quantification of cytokine responses to proinsulin in peripheral blood may prove to be a promising specific marker of diabetes progression and could, in addition to insulin autoantibodies, be used in the prediction of type 1 diabetes.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 1005

SP - 288

EP - 294

JO - ANN NY ACAD SCI

JF - ANN NY ACAD SCI

SN - 0077-8923

ER -