Monoclonal Antibodies Defined Abnormalities of T-Lymphocytes in Type I (Insulin-dependent) Diabetes

Author:

Pozzilli P1,Zuccarini O1,Iavicoli M1,Andreani D1,Sensi M2,Spencer K M2,Bottazzo G F2,Beverley P C L3,Kyner J L4,Cudworth A G2

Affiliation:

1. Chair of Endocrinology (I), University of Rome Medical School Italy

2. Department of Diabetes and Immunogenetics, St. Bartholomew's Hospital Medical College London, United Kingdom

3. ICRF Human Tumour Immunology Group, University College Hospital Medical School London, United Kingdom

4. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Kansas, School of Medicine, Kansas City Kansas

Abstract

Peripheral T-lymphocytes subsets have been investigated in 36 patients with type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes of varying duration, 18 patients with type II (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes, and in 23 healthy subjects, using six different monoclonal antibodies. At the time of diagnosis of type I diabetes, there was evidence of an increase in cytotoxic T-lymphocytes, a decrease in suppressor T-lymphocytes, but a normal proportion of helper/inducer T-lymphocytes. In six of seven newly diagnosed cases studied, there was evidence of an increased number of activated T cells. An increase in activated T-cells was also found in 5 of 10 genetically susceptible islet cell antibody positive unaffected siblings in type I diabetic probands. In type I diabetes of long standing, the total T-cell population was decreased, largely due to a marked decrease in helper/inducer T-lymphocytes. Type II diabetic patients showed no abnormalities in T-lymphocyte subsets, making it unlikely that hyperglycemia was responsible for the changes observed. These results suggest that an imbalance of T-lymphocyte regulation is an important feature of type I diabetes and lend support for an immunologic role in its early pathogenesis.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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