Affiliation:
1. Diabetes Research Institute, Forschergruppe Diabetes e.V., Munich
2. Center for Regenerative Therapies – Dresden, Dresden University of Technology, Dresden, Germany
Abstract
Summary
Insulin autoantibodies (IAA) can appear in children within months of introducing solid foods to the diet and before clinical type 1 diabetes. The aim of this study was to determine whether infant dietary antigens could be immunizing agents of IAA. To this end, IAA binding to [125I]insulin was competed with food preparations and extracts of foods encountered in the infant diet (milk formulas, bovine milk, wheat flour, fowl meal). Bovine milk powder extracts inhibited IAA-positive samples from six of 53 children (age 0·3–14·0 years) participating in German prospective cohorts. Inhibition in these sera ranged from 23 to 100%. Competition was abolished when hydrolyzed milk powder was used. Competition with protein components of bovine milk found that two of the six milk-reactive sera were inhibited strongly by alpha- and beta-casein; none were inhibited by the milk proteins bovine serum albumin or lactoglobulins. The two casein-reactive sera had high affinity to alpha-casein (1·7 × 109; 3·1 × 109 l/mol), and lesser affinity to beta-casein (4·0 × 108; 7·0 × 107 l/mol) and insulin (2·6 × 108; 1·6 × 108 l/mol). No children with milk-reactive IAA developed autoantibodies to other islet autoantigens or diabetes (median follow-up 9·8 years). These results suggest that autoimmunity to insulin can occur infrequently via cross-reactivity to food proteins, but this form of IAA immunization does not appear to be associated with progression to diabetes.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
8 articles.
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