METHODS: We examined monocyte prostaglandin synthase 2 (PGS2/COX2) expression in individuals at risk for or with type 1 diabetes including: (i) 58 established type 1 and 2 diabetic patients; (ii) 34 autoantibody positive (AA+) children and adults; (iii) 164 infants and young children with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) susceptibility human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles; and (iv) 37 healthy control individuals, over a 5-yr period. RESULTS: Established type 1 diabetic patients (1 month to 30+ yr post-disease onset) had significantly higher PGS2 expression than healthy controls; by contrast, insulin-treated type 2 diabetic patients had significantly lower PGS2 expression than healthy controls. Longitudinal studies of AA+ subjects at risk for type 1 diabetes indicated that 73% (11/15) of individuals who developed this disease during the study period expressed high levels of PGS2 prior to or after onset. We also found high level PGS2 expression in genetically at-risk infants and young children that correlated with having a first-degree relative with type 1 diabetes, but not with age, gender, or HLA genotype. In this population, high level PGS2 expression coincided with or preceded autoantibody detection in 30% (3/10) of subjects. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that high level monocyte PGS2 expression, although subject to fluctuation, is present in at-risk subjects at an early age and is maintained during progression to and after type 1 diabetes onset.
METHODS: We examined monocyte prostaglandin synthase 2 (PGS2/COX2) expression in individuals at risk for or with type 1 diabetes including: (i) 58 established type 1 and 2 diabeticpatients; (ii) 34 autoantibody positive (AA+) children and adults; (iii) 164 infants and young children with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) susceptibility human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles; and (iv) 37 healthy control individuals, over a 5-yr period. RESULTS: Established type 1 diabeticpatients (1 month to 30+ yr post-disease onset) had significantly higher PGS2 expression than healthy controls; by contrast, insulin-treated type 2 diabeticpatients had significantly lower PGS2 expression than healthy controls. Longitudinal studies of AA+ subjects at risk for type 1 diabetes indicated that 73% (11/15) of individuals who developed this disease during the study period expressed high levels of PGS2 prior to or after onset. We also found high level PGS2 expression in genetically at-risk infants and young children that correlated with having a first-degree relative with type 1 diabetes, but not with age, gender, or HLA genotype. In this population, high level PGS2 expression coincided with or preceded autoantibody detection in 30% (3/10) of subjects. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that high level monocyte PGS2 expression, although subject to fluctuation, is present in at-risk subjects at an early age and is maintained during progression to and after type 1 diabetes onset.
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