| Literature DB >> 33418884 |
Jide Tian1, Blake Middleton1, Victoria Seunghee Lee1, Hye Won Park1, Zhixuan Zhang1, Bokyoung Kim1, Catherine Lowe1, Nancy Nguyen1, Haoyuan Liu1, Ryan S Beyer1, Hannah W Chao1, Ryan Chen1, Davis Mai1, Karen Anne O'Laco1, Min Song1, Daniel L Kaufman1.
Abstract
Some immune system cells express type A and/or type B γ-aminobutyric acid receptors (GABAA-Rs and/or GABAB-Rs). Treatment with GABA, which activates both GABAA-Rs and GABAB-Rs), and/or a GABAA-R-specific agonist inhibits disease progression in mouse models of type 1 diabetes (T1D), multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, and COVID-19. Little is known about the clinical potential of specifically modulating GABAB-Rs. Here, we tested lesogaberan, a peripherally restricted GABAB-R agonist, as an interventive therapy in diabetic NOD mice. Lesogaberan treatment temporarily restored normoglycemia in most newly diabetic NOD mice. Combined treatment with a suboptimal dose of lesogaberan and proinsulin/alum immunization in newly diabetic NOD mice or a low-dose anti-CD3 in severely hyperglycemic NOD mice greatly increased T1D remission rates relative to each monotherapy. Mice receiving combined lesogaberan and anti-CD3 displayed improved glucose tolerance and, unlike mice that received anti-CD3 alone, had some islets with many insulin+ cells, suggesting that lesogaberan helped to rapidly inhibit β-cell destruction. Hence, GABAB-R-specific agonists may provide adjunct therapies for T1D. Finally, the analysis of microarray and RNA-Seq databases suggested that the expression of GABAB-Rs and GABAA-Rs, as well as GABA production/secretion-related genes, may be a more common feature of immune cells than currently recognized.Entities:
Keywords: GABA receptor; GABAA-R; GABAB-R; autoimmune disease; immunotherapy; type 1 diabetes
Year: 2021 PMID: 33418884 PMCID: PMC7825043 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines9010043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059