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Suspected cause of Type 1 Diabetes caught
"Red-handed"
Newswise — Scientists at Washington
University School of Medicine in St. Louis
working with diabetic mice have examined in
unprecedented detail the immune cells long
thought to be responsible for type 1
diabetes.
Researchers were able to examine the immune
cells from isolated insulin-making
structures in the pancreas known as the
islets of Langerhans.
They caught the immune cells, known as
dendritic cells, "red-handed": Carrying
insulin and fragments of insulin-producing
cells known as beta cells.
This can be the first step toward starting a
misdirected immune system attack that
destroys the beta cells, preventing the body
from making insulin and causing type 1
diabetes.
The results, reported online in The
Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, push scientists a step closer
to finding ways to treat this condition.
"Now that we've isolated dendritic cells
from the pancreas, we can look at why they
get into the pancreas and determine which of
the materials that they pick up are most
critical to causing this form of diabetes,"
says senior author Emil R. Unanue, M.D., the
Paul and Ellen Lacy Professor of Pathology.
"That may allow us to find ways to inhibit
dendritic cell function in order to block
the disorder."
The American Diabetes Association estimates
that 1 million to 2 million Americans suffer
from type 1 diabetes, which is also called
juvenile diabetes because it frequently
develops in children.
Patients require insulin injections to
survive because the immune system has
destroyed the islets of Langerhans, which
contain the body's only beta cells.
The insulin these cells make is required for
the critical task of regulating blood sugar
levels.
Scientists detected dendritic cells in the
islets years ago. Dendritic and other
antigen-presenting cells are the sentinels
of the immune system: They pick up bits of
protein from around the body and present
them to lymphocytes to initiate an immune
system reaction.
The lymphocytes lead immune attacks against
foreign invaders like bacteria and viruses
and eliminate them, clearing infections.
But when interaction between an
antigen-presenting cell and a lymphocyte
leads to a part of the body being mistakenly
identified as alien, the resulting attack
harms the body, causing autoimmune diseases.
Although dendritic cells' presence in the
islets and their ability to summon immune
attacks made them likely suspects in type 1
diabetes, they were challenging to isolate
from the pancreas for closer examination.
"They're very tiny and there are only about
5 to 10 of them per islet, each of which
contains approximately a thousand cells,"
explains Unanue.
"So the senior postdoctoral researcher in
the lab who did this work, Boris Calderon,
had to develop some sophisticated cellular
assays to pick them up."
Calderon, M.D., found indications that the
cells were carrying granules of insulin and
pieces of proteins from beta cells on their
cell surfaces.
To test whether this cargo carried by the
dendritic cells had the potential to trigger
an immune attack on beta cells, Calderon
exposed the dendritic cells to lymphocytes
taken from diabetic mice.
The lymphocytes were activated by the
dendritic cells of the islets and switched
into attack mode.
In a separate line of research, Unanue's lab
has learned that dendritic cells in the
pancreas may normally have beneficial
effects on the health of beta cells.
They've shown that when dendritic cells are
absent from the pancreas, the beta cells are
smaller, an indication that they're not as
healthy.
"We think these dendritic cells aren't in
the pancreas by accident," says Unanue.
"We believe that in the normal individual
they help maintain the health of beta cells.
But in a person with autoimmune diabetes,
they appear to start the problems that
destroy beta cells."
The key distinction likely lies in a group
of proteins called the major
histocompatibility complex (MHC). Two
decades ago, Unanue and Paul Allen, Ph.D.,
the Robert L. Kroc Professor of Pathology
and Immunology, showed that the MHC provides
the stage on which antigen-presenting cells
show bits of protein or peptides to other
immune system cells.
Scientists believe autoimmune conditions
like type 1 diabetes are caused by
differences in what the MHC binds to and how
it presents that material to immune attack
cells. In support of this theory, Unanue's
laboratory and that of Michael Gross, Ph.D.,
Washington University professor of
chemistry, have collaboratively shown that
the genes that encode the MHC proteins in
the diabetic mouse are unique and bind to a
set of very characteristic peptides.
In addition to studying what protein
fragments carried by dendritic cells are
essential for causing type 1 diabetes,
Unanue and others are working to learn how
genetic variations in the MHC alter the
chances that the immune system will
mistakenly attack the body.
Calderon B, Suri A, Miller MJ, Unanue ER.
Dendritic cells in islets of Langerhans
constitutively present beta cell derived
peptides bound to their class II MHC
molecules. Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, early online
edition.
Funding from the National Institutes of
Health, the Juvenile Diabetic Research
Foundation, and the Kilo Diabetes and
Vascular Research Foundation supported this
research.
Washington University School of Medicine's
2,100 employed and volunteer faculty
physicians also are the medical staff of
Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's
hospitals.
The School of Medicine is one of the leading
medical research, teaching and patient care
institutions in the nation, currently ranked
third in the nation by U.S. News & World
Report.
Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish
and St. Louis Children's hospitals, the
School of Medicine is linked to BJC
HealthCare.
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