| Literature DB >> 18820210 |
Outi Vaarala1, Mark A Atkinson, Josef Neu.
Abstract
It is often stated that type 1 diabetes results from a complex interplay between varying degrees of genetic susceptibility and environmental factors. While agreeing with this principal, our desire is that this Perspectives article will highlight another complex interplay potentially associated with this disease involving facets related to the gut, one where individual factors that, upon their interaction with each another, form a "perfect storm" critical to the development of type 1 diabetes. This trio of factors includes an aberrant intestinal microbiota, a "leaky" intestinal mucosal barrier, and altered intestinal immune responsiveness. Studies examining the microecology of the gastrointestinal tract have identified specific microorganisms whose presence appears related (either quantitatively or qualitatively) to disease; in type 1 diabetes, a role for microflora in the pathogenesis of disease has recently been suggested. Increased intestinal permeability has also been observed in animal models of type 1 diabetes as well as in humans with or at increased-risk for the disease. Finally, an altered mucosal immune system has been associated with the disease and is likely a major contributor to the failure to form tolerance, resulting in the autoimmunity that underlies type 1 diabetes. Herein, we discuss the complex interplay between these factors and raise testable hypotheses that form a fertile area for future investigations as to the role of the gut in the pathogenesis and prevention of type 1 diabetes.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18820210 PMCID: PMC2551660 DOI: 10.2337/db08-0331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461
Intestinal alterations reported in patients with type 1 diabetes or in individuals at risk of type 1 diabetes
| Finding | Interpretation | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Increased absorbed ratio of ingested lactulose and mannitol in patients with type 1 diabetes | Altered gut permeability in type 1 diabetes | Kuitunen et al. ( |
| Increased absorption of ingested lactulose and mannitol in individuals with β-cell autoimmunity | Altered gut permeability in pre-diabetes | Bosi et al. ( |
| Alterations in height and thickness of microvilli, space between microvilli and thickness of tight junctions | Mucosal injury in type 1 diabetes | Secondulfo et al. ( |
| High levels of serum zonulin in patients with type 1 diabetes | Changes in tight junctions in type 1 diabetes | Sapone et al. ( |
| Enhanced expression of HLA-DR and –DP, ICAM-1, α4β7-integrin, IL-4, IL-1α, IFN-γ in small intestinal biopsy samples from children with type 1 diabetes | Intestinal inflammation in children with type 1 diabetes | Savilahti et al. ( |
| Higher density of intraepithelial CD3 and γ/δ-cells and lamina propria CD25 cells in type 1 diabetes | Activation of intestinal immunity in type 1 diabetes | Auricchio et al. ( |
| Increase in CD3 and CD25 cells and enhanced ICAM-1 and HLA-DR expression in small intestinal biopsy samples cultured with gliadin | Activation of intestinal T-cells by gliadin in type 1 diabetes | Auricchio et al. ( |
| Increased expression of matrix metalloproteinases and apoptotic cells in small intestinal biopsy samples from children with type 1 diabetes and anti-transglutaminase antibodies | Prominent mucosal inflammation related response in the diabetic children positive for transglutaminase antibodies | Bister et al. ( |
| Enterovirus detected in small intestinal biopsies from patients with type 1 diabetes | Chronic or recurrent intestinal enterovirus infections in type 1 diabetes | Oikarinen et al. ( |
| Low numbers of Foxp3-positive cells or Foxp3 transcripts despite increased IL-18 transcription in small intestinal biopsy samples from children with type 1 diabetes | No activation of intestinal regulatory T-cells despite activation of innate immunity in children with type 1 diabetes | Tiittanen et al. ( |
FIG. 1.Constituents of the intestine.
FIG. 2.Hypothetical model of the contribution of various gut components to the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes.
FIG. 3.Immunoperoxidase stainings for HLA-DR (A and B) and HLA-DP (C and D) in jejunal biopsy specimens from a healthy control (A and C) and from a type 1 diabetic patient with normal jejunal mucosa (B and D). Intensive, positive HLA-DR staining is seen throughout the epithelial cells of the villi and also in many crypt cells in the type 2 diabetic specimen (B), whereas the control specimen shows only faint HLA-DR staining in the apical parts of the epithelial cells at the tip of the villi (A). The biopsy specimen from a control patient treated with HLA-DP antibody shows scattered positive granules in the apical parts of the epithelial cells at the tip of the villi (C), whereas strong positive staining is seen throughout the villous epithelial cells in the specimen from a type 1 diabetic patient (D). No positive staining is seen with either HLA-DR or HLA-DP in crypt cells in the control specimen (A and C). AEC-hematoxylin stain, original magnification ×50. (Please see http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db08-0331 for a high-quality digital representation of this figure.)