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Congenital beta cell defects are not associated with markers of islet autoimmunity, even in the context of high genetic risk for type 1 diabetes.

Authors :
Wyatt, Rebecca C.
Hagopian, William A.
Roep, Bart O.
Patel, Kashyap A.
Resnick, Brittany
Dobbs, Rebecca
Hudson, Michelle
De Franco, Elisa
Ellard, Sian
Flanagan, Sarah E.
Hattersley, Andrew T.
Oram, Richard A.
Johnson, Matthew B.
Source :
Diabetologia; Jul2022, Vol. 65 Issue 7, p1179-1184, 6p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Aims/hypothesis: A key unanswered question in type 1 diabetes is whether beta cells initiate their own destruction or are victims of an aberrant immune response (beta cell suicide or homicide?). To investigate this, we assessed islet autoantibodies in individuals with congenital beta cell defects causing neonatal diabetes mellitus (NDM). Methods: We measured autoantibodies to GAD (GADA), islet antigen-2 (IA-2A) and zinc transporter 8 (ZnT8A) in 242 individuals with NDM (median age diagnosed 1.8 months [IQR 0.39–2.9 months]; median age collected 4.6 months [IQR 1.8–27.6 months]; median diabetes duration 2 months [IQR 0.6–23 months]), including 75 whose NDM resulted from severe beta cell endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. As a control cohort we also tested samples from 69 diabetes-free individuals (median age collected 9.9 months [IQR 9.0–48.6 months]) for autoantibodies. Results: We found low prevalence of islet autoantibodies in individuals with monogenic NDM; 13/242 (5.4% [95% CI 2.9, 9.0%]) had detectable GADA, IA-2A and/or ZnT8A. This was similar to the proportion in the control participants who did not have diabetes (1/69 positive [1.4%, 95% CI 0.03, 7.8%], p=0.3). Importantly, monogenic individuals with beta cell ER stress had a similar rate of GADA/IA-2A/ZnT8A positivity to non-ER stress aetiologies (2.7% [95% CI 0.3, 9.3%] vs 6.6% [95% CI 3.3, 11.5%] p=0.4). We observed no association between islet autoimmunity and genetic risk, age at testing (including 30 individuals >10 years at testing) or diabetes duration (p>0.4 for all). Conclusions/interpretation: Our data support the hypothesis that beta cell stress/dysfunction alone does not lead to the production of islet autoantibodies, even in the context of high-risk HLA types. This suggests that additional factors are required to trigger an autoimmune response towards beta cells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0012186X
Volume :
65
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Diabetologia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157306366
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-022-05697-3