| Literature DB >> 32314012 |
Kerry A McLaughlin1, Melissa A Tombs2, Michael R Christie3,4.
Abstract
Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease whereby components of insulin-secreting pancreatic beta cells are targeted by the adaptive immune system leading to the destruction of these cells and insulin deficiency. There is much interest in the development of antigen-specific immune intervention as an approach to prevent disease development in individuals identified as being at risk of disease. It is now recognised that there are multiple targets of the autoimmune response in type 1 diabetes, the most recently identified being a member of the tetraspanin family, tetraspanin-7. The heterogeneity of autoimmune responses to different target antigens complicates the assessment of diabetes risk by the detection of autoantibodies, as well as creating challenges for the design of strategies to intervene in the immune response to these autoantigens. This review describes the discovery of tetraspanin-7 as a target of autoantibodies in type 1 diabetes and how the detection of autoantibodies to the protein provides a valuable marker for future loss of pancreatic beta-cell function.Entities:
Keywords: Autoantibodies; Autoimmunity; Disease prediction; Type 1 diabetes
Year: 2020 PMID: 32314012 PMCID: PMC7395010 DOI: 10.1007/s00430-020-00674-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Microbiol Immunol ISSN: 0300-8584 Impact factor: 3.402
Fig. 1Immunoprecipitation of 38 kDa protein (Glima 38) by antibodies in sera from patients with type 1 diabetes. Proteins within the rat pancreatic beta-cell line, RIN 5AH, were radiolabelled with 35S methionine by incubation of the cells in medium containing 35S methionine. Proteins were extracted from labelled cells in Triton X-114 and subjected to temperature-induced phase separation to isolate amphiphilic membrane proteins (ref). Radiolabelled membrane proteins were incubated with sera from patients with type 1 diabetes overnight, immune complexes captured on protein A Sepharose, washed and separated by SDS PAGE. The figure shows the results of immunoprecipitation reactions with 16 patients with type 1 diabetes (1–16), two non-diabetic control samples (C), and two Glima 38 positive control samples. Diffuse 38 kDa bands, characteristic of heavily glycosylated membrane proteins such as the tetraspanin family, were specifically immunoprecipitated by antibodies in sera from patients with type 1 diabetes
Fig. 2Model of structure of tetraspanin-7. The three-dimensional structure of Tspan7 was modelled by SWISS-MODEL [56] using the structure of CD81 as template. The figure shows the short and long ectodomains in green and orange, respectively, the four transmembrane domains arranged in a cone-like structure in red and the three short cytoplasmic domains arranged close together in blue. Epitopes for antibodies in type 1 diabetes are likely to lie within the cytoplasmic domains