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    J Clin Invest. 2002 Jan;109(1):131-40.

    Multiple immuno-regulatory defects in type-1 diabetes.

    Kukreja A, Cost G, Marker J, Zhang C, Sun Z, Lin-Su K, Ten S, Sanz M, Exley M, Wilson B, Porcelli S, Maclaren N.

    Department of Pediatrics, Weill College of Medicine of Cornell University, New York, New York, USA.

    Susceptibility to immune-mediated diabetes (IMD) in humans and NOD mice involves their inherently defective T cell immunoregulatory abilities. We have followed natural killer (NK) T cell numbers in patients with IMD, both by flow cytometry using mAbs to the characteristic junctions found in the T cell receptors of this cell subtype, and by semiquantitative RT-PCR for the corresponding transcripts. Both before and after clinical onset, the representation of these cells in patients' PBMCs is reduced. We also report low numbers of resting CD4(+) CD25(+) T cells in IMD patients, a subset of T cells shown to have important immunoregulatory functions in abrogating autoimmunities in 3-day thymectomized experimental mice. Whereas a biased Th1 to Th2 cytokine profile has been suggested to underlie the pathogenesis of IMD in both species, we found defective production of IFN-gamma in our patients after in vitro stimulation of their PBMCs by phorbol-myristate acetate and ionomycin and both IFN-gamma and IL-4 deficiencies in V(alpha)24(+) NK T-enriched cells. These data suggest that multiple immunoregulatory T (Treg) cell defects underlie islet cell autoimmunity leading to IMD in humans and that these lesions may be part of a broad T cell defect.

    PMID: 11781358 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 150819

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