Display Settings:

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

    Diabetes. 2005 Sep;54(9):2549-56.

    Interferon-alpha as a mediator of polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid-induced type 1 diabetes.

    Devendra D, Jasinski J, Melanitou E, Nakayama M, Li M, Hensley B, Paronen J, Moriyama H, Miao D, Eisenbarth GS, Liu E.

    Barbara Davis Center for Childhood Diabetes, 4200 East 9th Ave., Box B140, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO 80262, USA. edwin.liu@uchsc.edu

    A number of studies and clinical case reports have implicated interferon (IFN)-alpha as a potential mediator of type 1 diabetes pathogenesis. Administration of polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid (poly I:C), a mimic of viral double-stranded RNA, induces diabetes in C57BL/6 mice expressing the B7.1 costimulatory molecule in islets. We investigated the potential role of IFN-alpha in this disease model. The quantitative correlation between IFN-alpha levels and time to diabetes, diabetes prevention with anti-IFN-alpha antibody, and ability of IFN-alpha itself to induce diabetes are consistent with the hypothesis that poly I:C in this model acts by induction of IFN-alpha in a genetically susceptible host. Numerous recent studies highlight the importance of the innate immune system and toll receptors in determining adaptive immune responses, and we speculate that for type 1 diabetes, viral and other environmental factors may act through induction of IFNs.

    PMID: 16123342 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    Supplemental Content

    Click here to read