Autoimmunity and the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes.

Autor: Csorba TR; Department of Pathology & Laboratory Medicine, University of Calgary, Faculty of Medicine, Calgary, AB, Canada. Thomas.Csorba@shaw.ca, Lyon AW, Hollenberg MD
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Critical reviews in clinical laboratory sciences [Crit Rev Clin Lab Sci] 2010 Mar-Apr; Vol. 47 (2), pp. 51-71.
DOI: 10.3109/10408361003787171
Abstrakt: Type 1 diabetes mellitus (TID) is an autoimmune genetic disease with unidentified environmental agents affecting its pathogenesis. Susceptibility is determined by the interaction of MHC and non-MHC genes in the thymus, primarily by the IDDM1 locus, which is extremely polymorphic and thus generates multitudes of predisposing and protective haplotypes for binding self-peptides. By presenting these peptide antigens to immature T-cells for activation and selection, most autoreactive cells will be deleted, but inefficient presentation and subsequent deficiencies of non-MHC genes allow some cells to escape to the periphery and to be eliminated by anergy or regulatory T-cells. T-cell dysregulation to a Th1 response with secretion of inflammatory cytokines promotes a self-perpetuating autoimmune cascade leading to overt disease unless blocked by suppressive cytokines from Th2-type cells. Since autoantibodies reflect target-cell destruction, early insulin autoantibodies may be transient due to benign insulitis induced by insulin or proinsulin. Multiple autoantibodies denote epitope spreading to cryptic autoantigens, likely involving posttranslational variants. Thus, the resulting T1D development requires coordinated abnormal variations, and this requirement limits its occurrence to a small minority of susceptible individuals.
Databáze: MEDLINE
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