| Literature DB >> 35867130 |
Amir-Babak Sioofy-Khojine1, Sarah J Richardson2, Jonathan M Locke2, Sami Oikarinen1,3, Noora Nurminen1, Antti-Pekka Laine4, Kate Downes5,6, Johanna Lempainen4,7,8, John A Todd5,9, Riitta Veijola10,11, Jorma Ilonen4, Mikael Knip12,13,14, Noel G Morgan2, Heikki Hyöty1,3,14, Mark Peakman15,16, Martin Eichmann17,18.
Abstract
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Enteroviral infection has been implicated consistently as a key environmental factor correlating with the appearance of autoimmunity and/or the presence of overt type 1 diabetes, in which pancreatic insulin-producing beta cells are destroyed by an autoimmune response. Genetic predisposition through variation in the type 1 diabetes risk gene IFIH1 (interferon induced with helicase C domain 1), which encodes the viral pattern-recognition receptor melanoma differentiation-associated protein 5 (MDA5), supports a potential link between enterovirus infection and type 1 diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: Autoimmunity; Enterovirus; Genetic risk; IFIH-1; Interferon induced with helicase C domain 1; MDA5; Melanoma differentiation-associated protein 5; Pancreatic islets; Type 1 diabetes; rs1990760
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35867130 PMCID: PMC9477938 DOI: 10.1007/s00125-022-05753-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetologia ISSN: 0012-186X Impact factor: 10.460
Fig. 1Detection of EV-RNA in peripheral blood. In the children cohort, the presence of EV-RNA was assessed in plasma and PBMCs (a) and in PBMCs from specific subgroups (d). In the adult cohort, the presence of EV-RNA was assessed in defined peripheral blood cell subsets (b) and in individuals with and without type 1 diabetes (c). Red shading indicates EV-RNA-positive; white indicates EV-RNA-negative. Differences between groups were statistically significant as indicated: *p<0.05; **p<0.01; ***p<0.001 (Fisher’s exact test, two-sided). T1D, type 1 diabetes
Detection of EV-RNA and IFIH1 genotype in the children and adult cohorts
| Cohorts and subgroups | Total | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 946Ala/Ala | 946Ala/Thr | 946Thr/Thr | EV-RNApos/ total | |
| Children | ||||
| No islet autoantibody | 0/9 (0.0) | 0/13 (0.0) | 1/8 (12.5) | 1/30 (3.3) |
| mAAb | ||||
| With T1D | 1/9 (11.1) | 4/12 (33.3) | 2/3 (66.7) | 7/24 (29.2) |
| Without T1D | 2/8 (25.0) | 4/12 (33.3) | 1/5 (20.0) | 7/25 (28.0) |
| Sub-total | 3/17 (17.7) | 8/24 (33.3) | 3/8 (37.5) | 14/49 (28.6) |
| All children | 3/26 (11.5) | 8/37 (21.6) | 4/16 (25.0) | 15/79 (19.0) |
| Adult | ||||
| With T1D | 0/5 (0.0) | 3/17 (17.7) | 6/15 (40.0) | 9/37 (24.3) |
| Without T1D | 1/7 (14.3) | 6/17 (35.3) | 3/11 (27.3) | 10/35 (28.6) |
| All adults | 1/12 (8.3) | 9/34 (26.5) | 9/26 (34.6) | 19/72 (26.4) |
| Children and adult combined | 4/38 (10.5) | 17/71(23.9) | 13/42 (31.0) | 34/151 (22.5) |
Data are shown as EV-RNA-positive individuals/total individuals (frequency of EV-RNA positivity expressed as %)
T1D, type 1 diabetes
OR for detection of EV-RNA according to IFIH1 variants
| Combined | Adult | Children | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | ||||
| Ala/Ala vs Thr/Thr | 0.26 (0.087, 0.84) | 0.031* | 0.17 (0.015, 1.22) | 0.13 | 0.39 (0.089, 1.69) | 0.40 |
| Ala/Ala vs Ala/Thr | 0.37 (0.13, 1.18) | 0.13 | 0.25 (0.021, 1.71) | 0.25 | 0.47 (0.13, 1.91) | 0.50 |
| Ala/Ala + Ala/Thr vs Thr/Thr | 0.53 (0.23, 1.21) | 0.13 | 0.53 (0.18, 1.56) | 0.27 | 0.64 (0.19, 2.08) | 0.49 |
| Ala/Ala vs Ala/Thr + Thr/Thr | 0.33 (0.12, 0.98) | 0.045* | 0.21 (0.019, 1.47) | 0.16 | 0.45 (0.13, 1.73) | 0.36 |
OR were calculated using the Baptista–Pike method
p values are for EV-RNA-positive vs EV-RNA-negative (Fisher’s exact test, two-sided); *p<0.05
Fig. 2Detection of EV capsid protein VP1 in pancreatic islet sections. EV capsid protein VP1 was detected by immunohistochemistry in tissues from 43 donors with type 1 diabetes, with the defined variant in IFIH1 (rs1990760, Thr946Ala). Red shading indicates EV-RNA-positive; white indicates EV-RNA-negative. Differences between groups were not statistically significant (Fisher’s exact test, two-sided)