Prognostically Significant Heterogeneity of Cytoplasmic Islet Cell Antibodies in Relatives of Patients with Type I Diabetes

Author:

Gianani Roberto1,Pugliese Alberto1,Bonner-Weir Susan1,Shiffrin Alicia J1,Soeldner J Stewart1,Erlich Henry1,Awdeh Zuhier1,Alper Chester A1,Jackson Richard A1,Eisenbarth George S1

Affiliation:

1. Joslin Diabetes Center, Brigham and Womens Hospital, Deaconess Hospital Boston Center for Blood Research Boston, Massachusetts McGill University Montreal, Quebec, Canada University of California Davis Cetus Corporation, Emeryville California

Abstract

A significant proportion of relatives of patients with insulin-dependent (type I) diabetes with high titers of cytoplasmic islet cell autoantibodies (ICAs) do not progress to overt diabetes with up to 8 yr of follow-up. This may reflect that follow-up of such relatives has not been long enough to observe diabetes, that despite expression of identical ICAs, some relatives will not progress to diabetes; or that there is heterogeneity in what is identified as ICA. We identified a subset of ICA that was restricted in its species (not reacting with mouse islets) and cell-type reactivity within islets (β-cell specific). Only one of eight relatives whose sera had the restricted pattern of reactivity progressed to overt diabetes, and on sequential evaluation, all but the one relative who progressed to diabetes have maintained normal first-phase insulin secretion to intravenous glucose. In contrast, by life-table analysis, 70% of relatives expressing nonrestricted ICA became diabetic within 5 yr of follow-up (1 of 8 vs. 16 of 25 diabetic at last follow-up, P < 0.02). Moreover, preliminary data suggest a significant association of the human leukocyte antigen DQB1*0602 allele of DR2 haplotypes with the restricted ICA pattern (4 of 5 DQB1*0602 restricted vs. 0 nonrestricted ICA, P = 0.006). We propose that expression of a genetically determined restricted ICA pattern confers a markedly lower risk for progression to diabetes. Our studies suggest that relatives with restricted ICA may comprise most ICA+ relatives who do not develop diabetes or abnormal first-phase insulin secretion on follow-up of >5 yr and that expression of such autoantibodies may be associated with the ‘protective’ DQB1*0602 allele.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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