Blood test gives clues to who will develop type 1 diabetes

February 27, 2017  10:53

Together with colleagues from Helmholtz Zentrum München, researchers at the DFG Center for Regenerative Therapies Dresden (CRTD) in Dresden introduce a new understanding of cellular mechanisms occurring in babies having a high risk of developing type 1 diabetes. The study was published in ‘Science Translational Medicine’.

Type 1 diabetes occurs when the body’s own immune system destroys the cells in the pancreas that produce insulin. The process usually starts in childhood in genetically at risk children, and can be detected by the presence in the blood of antibodies to proteins in the pancreas. Each year, there are about 2300 new cases of type 1 diabetes in Germany and this number has doubled in the last twelve years. While a genetic predisposition helps to identify children at risk for the disease, researchers around the world still try to further identify why in some children at risk the disease breaks out while in others not.

Led by Prof. Ezio Bonifacio, group leader and Director at the DFG Center for Regenerative Therapies Dresden (CRTD), Cluster of Excellence at TU Dresden, and group leader at DZD-Paul Langerhans Institute Dresden, the researchers closely looked at six months old children at high risk of developing type 1 diabetes followed throughout childhood by Prof. Dr. Anette-G. Ziegler, Director of the Institute of Diabetes Research at Helmholtz Zentrum München. One group of these children later in life developed autoantibodies that are typical for type 1 diabetes, while the other did not. When the researchers stimulated the T cells from the children with the pancreas proteins, they could identify a specific type of aggressive T-cells (TFH-TH1-TH17) that developed only in the children who later became positive for the antibodies. These T cells developed further into fully activated TH1 cells after the children became positive for the antibodies.

“Our finding on cells from these very young children is fascinating. It is the first time we are able to pinpoint a molecular difference in the immune system of children who develop diabetes so early in life. These exciting findings indicate that the immune system is already wrongly programmed, genetically or environmentally, really early. Our job now is to learn how to reset it before it starts to react against the insulin producing cells. We hope that the Freder1k study and our prevention studies will teach us”, explains Ezio Bonifacio.

“We were able to find these rare cells in the blood with new sophisticated methods established at the CRTD. We are trying to understand exactly what these special cells do and how they come about“, says CRTD scientist Dr. Anne Eugster. “We are excited at the possibility of using this knowledge to help developing prevention therapies such as our vaccination strategy”, comments Anette-G. Ziegler.

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