| Literature DB >> 19794074 |
David M Harlan1, Norma Sue Kenyon, Olle Korsgren, Bart O Roep.
Abstract
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19794074 PMCID: PMC2750210 DOI: 10.2337/db09-0476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461
Immune correlates of type 1 diabetes and islet allograft function
| Immune marker | Correlate | Comment | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Autoimmunity | |||
| Islet autoantibodies | Baseline prediction | Progressive islet graft failure occurs significantly earlier in autoantibody-positive than in autoantibody-negative type 1 diabetic recipients of intrahepatic islet allografts. | ( |
Insulin independence was not achieved in patients with baseline autoantibody elevations and was significantly less frequent in patients who seroconverted. | ( | ||
Patients with thyroid peroxisase autoantibodies before islet transplantation develop Graves disease after tapering of immune suppression. | ( | ||
| Seroconversion | Autoantibody levels had no significant association with outcome. | ( | |
Insulin independence was not achieved in patients with autoantibody elevations and was significantly less frequent in patients who seroconverted. | ( | ||
| T-cell autoreactivity | Baseline prediction | Patients without preexisting T-cell autoreactivity became insulin independent compared with none of the patients reactive to both GAD and IA-2 before transplantation. Cellular islet-specific autoimmunity associates with clinical outcome of islet cell transplantation under ATG-tacrolimus-MMF immunosuppression. | ( |
| Disease recurrence | Tight correlation between human β-cell allograft recipient's metabolic outcome and assays of peripheral blood cellular auto- and alloreactivity suggests a causal relationship. | ( | |
Subsequent islet implantations can reduce alloreactivity for repeated HLA mismatches. | ( | ||
| Homeostatic expansion | T-cell depletion therapy results in expansion of memory (islet autoreactive) T-cells. | ( | |
| Cytokines | γ-Interferon | γ-Interferon production in ELISPOT associates with type 1 diabetes. | ( |
| IL-10 | IL-10 production distinguishes control subjects from subjects with type 1 diabetes and associates with delayed onset of type 1 diabetes. | ( | |
| Alloreactivity | |||
| Alloantibodies | Baseline prediction | Pretransplant HLA antibodies are associated with reduced graft survival after clinical islet transplantation. | ( |
| Seroconversion | Monitoring panel reactive antibodies in immunosuppressed subjects has little clinical value in islet transplant recipients. The implications of allosensitization after discontinuation of immunosuppression need to be evaluated to define the clinical impact in this patient population. | ( | |
| Seroconversion after immunosuppression discontinued | Incidence of antidonor HLA alloantibodies posttransplant rises abruptly in subjects weaned completely from immunosuppression and is a cause for potential concern. | ( | |
| T-cell alloreactivity | CTLp | Informative correlate depending on immunotherapy. | ( |
Secondary to recurrent autoreactivity? | |||
Regulatory alloreactivity associated with outcome. | ( | ||
| Cytokines | γ-Interferon | Positive association with mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) assay. | ( |
| IL-10 | Marker of protection/preservation/tolerance. | ( | |
| Cytotoxic T-cell genes | |||
| Granzyme B | Loss of function | Granzyme B was the most reliable indicator of ongoing graft loss. The results suggest that, when taken into consideration with other clinical parameters, CTL gene expression may predict islet allograft loss. | ( |
| Perforin and Fas-L | Increased insulin needs | The decreased expression of perforin and Fas-L in patients with long-term type 1 diabetes might contribute to the inability to maintain normal levels of peripheral tolerance, which is essential for protection from autoimmune disease. | ( |
FIG. 1.Potential alternative islet implantation sites. Efforts directed to promote improved islet graft function and survival have led to studies testing alternative implantation sites, mostly in preclinical animal models, although the intramuscular route has shown some promise in the clinic (72). Recent pig model studies (73) have suggested promise for endoscopic transplant of the islets into the gastric submucosal space.
FIG. 2.Recognizing the tremendous disparity between the islet number that can be isolated from cadaveric donors and the potential recipient population, many investigators are working to develop a renewable and cost-efficient source of islets or islet-like clusters. Each strategy has potential advantages but also unique problems to overcome.
FIG. 3.Factors limiting islet graft function and survival. Present understanding is that transplanted islets (or islet-like clusters) face myriad overlapping forces all conspiring to limit graft function and/or survival. Effective strategies to develop islet transplantation for widespread clinical application will likely require effective countermeasures for each identified problem.