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Increased Plasma Soluble Interleukin-2 Receptor Alpha Levels in Patients With Long-Term Type 1 Diabetes With Vascular Complications Associated With IL2RA and PTPN2 Gene Polymorphisms

Authors :
Keindl, Magdalena
Fedotkina, Olena
du Plessis, Elsa
Jain, Ruchi
Bergum, Brith
Mygind Jensen, Troels
Laustrup Moller, Cathrine
Falhammar, Henrik
Nyström, Thomas
Catrina, Sergiu-Bogdan
Jörneskog, Gun
Groop, Leif
Eliasson, Mats
Eliasson, Björn
Brismar, Kerstin
Nilsson, Peter M.
Berg, Tore Julsrud
Appel, Silke
Lyssenko, Valeriya
Keindl, Magdalena
Fedotkina, Olena
du Plessis, Elsa
Jain, Ruchi
Bergum, Brith
Mygind Jensen, Troels
Laustrup Moller, Cathrine
Falhammar, Henrik
Nyström, Thomas
Catrina, Sergiu-Bogdan
Jörneskog, Gun
Groop, Leif
Eliasson, Mats
Eliasson, Björn
Brismar, Kerstin
Nilsson, Peter M.
Berg, Tore Julsrud
Appel, Silke
Lyssenko, Valeriya
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is largely considered an autoimmune disease leading to the destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells. Further, patients with T1D have 3-4-fold increased risk of developing micro- and macrovascular complications. However, the contribution of immune-related factors contributing to these diabetes complications are poorly understood. Individuals with long-term T1D who do not progress to vascular complications offer a great potential to evaluate end-organ protection. The aim of the present study was to investigate the association of inflammatory protein levels with vascular complications (retinopathy, nephropathy, cardiovascular disease) in individuals with long-term T1D compared to individuals who rapidly progressed to complications. We studied a panel of inflammatory markers in plasma of patients with long-term T1D with (n = 81 and 26) and without (n = 313 and 25) vascular complications from two cross-sectional Scandinavian cohorts (PROLONG and DIALONG) using Luminex technology. A subset of PROLONG individuals (n = 61) was screened for circulating immune cells using multicolor flow cytometry. We found that elevated plasma levels of soluble interleukin-2 receptor alpha (sIL-2R) were positively associated with the complication phenotype. Risk carriers of polymorphisms in the IL2RA and PTPN2 gene region had elevated plasma levels of sIL-2R. In addition, cell surface marker analysis revealed a shift from naive to effector T cells in T1D individuals with vascular complications as compared to those without. In contrast, no difference between the groups was observed either in IL-2R cell surface expression or in regulatory T cell population size. In conclusion, our data indicates that IL2RA and PTPN2 gene variants might increase the risk of developing vascular complications in people with T1D, by affecting sIL-2R plasma levels and potentially lowering T cell responsiveness. Thus, elevated sIL-2R plasma levels may serve as a biomarker in monit

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1234769975
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389.fendo.2020.575469