| Literature DB >> 35008819 |
Iwona Ben-Skowronek1, Joanna Sieniawska1, Emilia Pach1, Wiktoria Wrobel1, Anna Skowronek1, Zaklina Tomczyk1, Iga Rosolowska1.
Abstract
The autoimmune reaction against the beta cells of the pancreatic islets in type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) patients is active in prediabetes and during the development of the clinical manifestation of T1DM, but it decreases within a few years of the clinical manifestation of this disease. A key role in the pathogenesis of T1DM is played by regulatory T cell (Treg) deficiency or dysfunction. Immune interventions, such as potential therapeutic applications or the induction of the Treg-cell population in T1DM, will be important in the development of new types of treatment. The aim of this study was to evaluate innovative immune interventions as treatments for T1DM. After an evaluation of full-length papers from the PubMed database from 2010 to 2021, 20 trials were included for the final analysis. The analysis led to the following conclusions: Treg cells play an important role in the limitation of the development of T1DM, the activation or application of Tregs may be more effective in the early stages of T1DM development, and the therapeutic use of Treg cells in T1DM is promising but requires long-term observation in a large group of patients.Entities:
Keywords: T regulatory cells; diabetes mellitus type 1
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35008819 PMCID: PMC8745590 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23010390
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Formation and selection of Tregs.
Characteristics of Treg cells [17,36,37,38,39,40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47,48].
| Regulatory T Cells | Foxp3+Tregs | Tregs of B Cells (B-Cell-Induced Tregs) | Th3 | Tr1 | CD8+ Tregs | nTregs | iTregs |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Naïve Tregs—thymus. Peripheral Tregs—peripheral tissues and MALT (mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue). Induced Tregs—in vitro-induced Tregs | Spleen | Gut | Spleen | Spleen | Thymus | In vitro/ |
|
| CD4+, CD25+, Foxp3+, CTLA-4+ | CD4+CD25+Foxp3- LAG 3+ ICOS+PD1+GITR+ OX40+ | CD4+CD25-Foxp3- LAP+ | CD4+CD25− Foxp3+, CD49b+, LAG3+, CD226+ | CD25+, Foxp3+ | CD4+, CD25+, Foxp3+ | CD25+, Foxp3+ |
|
| Direct cell–cell contact Granzyme-B-dependent formation of TGF beta | IL-10 | TGF beta | IL-10 (strong) TGF beta CTLA4 CD226 | IL-4, IL-5, IL-10 | TGF beta | TGF beta |
|
| Reduction in the functional capacity of Foxp3+Treg populations contributes to disease development in type 1 diabetes | Immunomodulatory effect? | Th3 cells probably originate from naïve T cells as a result of stimulation with immature dendritic cells (iDCs), presenting various antigens, including autoantigens. Such stimulation results in the in vivo and in vitro formation of anergic cells with suppressive properties. | It has been shown that newly diagnosed T1DM patients and their first-degree relatives have fewer IL-10-secreting cells than healthy controls; this deficit in Treg function is amplified by an increased Teff function, which is reflected by increased antigen-specific IFN-c secretion. | The main triggers of β-cell autoimmunity | Inhibiting the immune response of effector T cells and maintaining immune tolerance | Inhibition of Th1 cells by a FasL-mediated cytotoxic effect |
Figure 2Mechanism of the suppressive action of Treg lymphocytes in type 1 diabetes mellitus.
Therapeutic application or induction of Tregs in T1DM.
| Methods of Therapy | Authors | Number of Patients | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Bluestone 2015 (42) | 14 | The therapy resulted in beta-cell regeneration, insulin production, and a strong decrease in therapeutic insulin intake. T1DM development was associated with changing proportions of naïve and memory Tregs and slowly increasing proinflammatory activity, which was only partially controlled by the administered Tregs. The authors suggest that the therapy should be administered early to protect the highest possible mass of islets and to utilize the preserved content of Tregs in the earlier phases of T1DM. The therapy extended remission of the T1MD (honeymoon) and decreased the doses of insulin necessary for treatment. |
|
| Hartemann et al., 2013 (47) | 24 | The authors defined a well-tolerated and immunologically effective dose range of IL2 for application to type 1 diabetes therapy and prevention. Early intervention with IL2 could help to re-establish a proper immune milieu and slow down or even reverse the pathological processes in T1DM. This therapy may improve maintenance of induced C-peptide production at 1 year. The adverse effects were influenza-like syndrome and injection-site reactions. |
| Induction of Tregs by tolerogenic DCs | |||
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| Haller et al., 2015, 2017, 2019 (52,53,64) | 17 | Immune responses returned to normal upon withdrawal of therapy. |
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| Orban et al., 2013 (65) | 112 | Co-stimulation modulation with abatacept slowed the decline of beta-cell function and improved HbA1c in recent-onset T1DM. The beneficial effect was sustained for at least one year after cessation of abatacept infusions or three years from T1DM diagnosis. |
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| Ostrov et al., 2018 (66) | 20 | Methyldopa specifically blocked DQ8 in patients with recent-onset T1D, highlighting the relevance of blocking disease-specific MHC class II antigen presentation to treat autoimmunity. |
|
| Elding Larsson 2018 (67) | 50 | The subcutaneous prime and boost administration of GAD-Alum was safe but did not affect progression of T1DM. |
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| Piekarski 2012 (68) | 90 | Alfadiol, an analogue of vitamin D3, increased or maintained the value of C-peptide during the annual monitoring as compared with baseline values. This therapy extended the honeymoon in children with newly diagnosed T1DM. |
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| Giannoukakis 2011 (54) | 10 | The autologous tolerogenic dendritic cells in patients between 1 and 5 years of T1DM upregulated the frequency of B220+CD11c-B-cells, but the average insulin dose in patients remained unchanged. |
| Induction of Treg by tolerogenic peptides | |||
|
| Orban et al., 2010 (56) | 12 | Oral insulin (7.5 mg/day) did not delay or prevent the development of type 1 diabetes. A higher dose (67.5 mg/day) was reported to produce protective insulin-responsive regulatory T-cell responses in genetically at-risk young relatives. |
|
| Alhadj et al., 2017 (5) | 27 | Proinsulin peptide therapy restored immune tolerance in preclinical phase of T1DM but did not accelerate the decrease in beta-cell function. |
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| Pellegrino (70) | 10 | Due to the Teff dysregulation upon p53 activation, molecules promoting p53 cannot be part of the therapy for T1DM. |
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| Li 2012 (71) | 13 | Human stem-cell transplantation is a safe and promising method for T1DM treatment and leads to an increase in C-peptide and insulin secretion. This method is more effective in the early stages of T1DM. Patients diagnosed in ketoacidosis at diagnosis have minimal chance for beta-cell recovery. |