Bringing the human pancreas into focus: new paradigms for the understanding of Type 1 diabetes

被引:14
|
作者
Morgan, N. G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Exeter, Inst Biomed & Clin Sci, Sch Med, Exeter, Devon, England
关键词
CD8; T-CELLS; RECENT-ONSET; ISLET INFLAMMATION; ACCELERATED PROGRESSION; INSULITIC LESIONS; EXOCRINE PANCREAS; ADULT PATIENTS; BETA-CELLS; PATHOGENESIS; LYMPHOCYTES;
D O I
10.1111/dme.13365
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Type 1 diabetes affects increasingly large numbers of people globally (including at least half a million children under the age of 14 years) and it remains an illness with life-long and often devastating consequences. It is surprising, therefore, that the underlying aetiology of Type 1 diabetes remains poorly understood. This is largely because the cellular and molecular processes leading to the loss of cells in the pancreas have rarely been studied at, or soon after, the onset of disease. Where such studies have been undertaken, a number of surprises have emerged which serve to challenge conventional wisdom. In particular, it is increasingly understood that the process of islet inflammation (insulitis) is much less florid in humans than in certain animal models. Moreover, the profile of immune cells involved in the inflammatory attack on cells is variable and this variation occurs at the level of individual patients. As a result, two distinct profiles of insulitis have now been defined that are differentially aggressive and that might, therefore, require specifically tailored therapeutic approaches to slow the progression of disease. In addition, the outcomes are also different in that the more aggressive form (termed CD20Hi') is associated with extensive -cell loss and an early age of disease onset (<7 years), while the less aggressive profile (known as CD20Lo') is associated with later onset (>13 years) and the retention of a higher proportion of residual cells. In the present review, these new findings are explained and their implications evaluated in terms of future therapies.
引用
收藏
页码:879 / 886
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Type 2 diabetes: new genes, new understanding
    Prokopenko, Inga
    McCarthy, Mark I.
    Lindgren, Cecilia M.
    TRENDS IN GENETICS, 2008, 24 (12) : 613 - 621
  • [42] Neonatal diabetes mellitus: understanding the molecular basis of human pancreas development
    Chen, R
    Hussain, K
    Dattani, MT
    Al-Ali, M
    Persaud, SJ
    Jones, PM
    Marsh, PJ
    DIABETOLOGIA, 2005, 48 : A68 - A68
  • [43] Neonatal diabetes mellitus: understanding the molecular basis of human pancreas development
    Chen, R.
    Hussain, K.
    Minton, J.
    Ellard, S.
    Jones, P. M.
    Marsh, P.
    DIABETIC MEDICINE, 2008, 25
  • [44] KidsAP: An Artificial Pancreas for Infants with Type 1 Diabetes
    Froehlich-Reiterer, Elke
    Tauschmann, Martin
    Rami-Merhar, Birgit
    Mader, Julia K.
    Fritsch, Maria
    Steichen-Gersdorf, Elisabeth
    Hofer, Sabine E.
    PADIATRIE UND PADOLOGIE, 2020, 55 (03): : 120 - 124
  • [45] Microalbuminuria and hypertension with focus on type 1 and type 2 diabetes
    Mogensen, CE
    JOURNAL OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 2003, 254 (01) : 45 - 66
  • [46] Coming of age: the artificial pancreas for type 1 diabetes
    Thabit, Hood
    Hovorka, Roman
    DIABETOLOGIA, 2016, 59 (09) : 1795 - 1805
  • [47] Kidney and pancreas transplantation in type 1 diabetes mellitus
    Lerner, Susan M.
    MOUNT SINAI JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2008, 75 (04): : 372 - 384
  • [48] Pancreas β cell regeneration and type 1 diabetes (Review)
    Wu, Jinxiao
    Yang, Xiyan
    Chen, Bin
    Xu, Xiuping
    EXPERIMENTAL AND THERAPEUTIC MEDICINE, 2015, 9 (03) : 653 - 657
  • [49] Coming of age: the artificial pancreas for type 1 diabetes
    Hood Thabit
    Roman Hovorka
    Diabetologia, 2016, 59 : 1795 - 1805
  • [50] The bioartificial pancreas - a future treatment for type 1 diabetes?
    Andersson, A
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY, 1997, 74 : 2 - 2