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Published in: Diabetologia 7/2010

01-07-2010 | Article

IFN-γ and IL-10 islet-antigen-specific T cell responses in autoantibody-negative first-degree relatives of patients with type 1 diabetes

Authors: L. G. Petrich de Marquesini, J. Fu, K. J. Connor, A. J. Bishop, N. E. McLintock, C. Pope, F. S. Wong, C. M. Dayan

Published in: Diabetologia | Issue 7/2010

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Abstract

Aims/hypothesis

Islet antibody-negative first-degree relatives of type 1 diabetes patients have a very low risk of developing diabetes. We studied the balance between IFN-γ (proinflammatory) and IL-10 (regulatory) T cell responses in these participants.

Methods

Peripheral blood T cells from adult (18–50 years old, n = 40) DRB1*0401-positive first-degree relatives negative for GAD and tyrosine phosphatase-like insulinoma antigen 2 (IA-2) antibodies were tested for IFN-γ and IL-10 responses in a sensitive cytokine enzyme-linked immunospot assay against a panel of seven peptide epitopes derived from IA-2 and proinsulin. Comparison was made with HLA-matched newly diagnosed type 1 diabetic patients (n = 42) and healthy controls (n = 39).

Results

First-degree relatives and newly diagnosed type 1 diabetic patients displayed a similar frequency of IFN-γ responses to the peptide panel and both were significantly greater than in healthy controls (relatives 9.6%, patients 11.8%, controls 4.0%, p = 0.003). First-degree relatives and newly diagnosed type 1 diabetic patients also showed similar frequencies of IL-10 responses, which were significantly lower than in healthy controls (relatives 7.1%, patients 9.0%, controls 15.8%, p = 0.003). However, individual IL-10 responses of first-degree relatives were similar in size to those in healthy controls and larger than those in newly diagnosed type 1 diabetic patients (relatives median 29 spot-forming cells/1 × 106 peripheral blood mononuclear cells, controls 33, patients 11, p = 0.02).

Conclusions/interpretation

Taken together, these results suggest that antibody-negative first-degree relatives have a balance of proinflammatory and regulatory T cells, which is intermediate between that of newly diagnosed type 1 diabetic patients and healthy controls. This suggests that even a moderate regulatory response may be sufficient to prevent the development of clinical type 1 diabetes in genetically predisposed individuals.
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Metadata
Title
IFN-γ and IL-10 islet-antigen-specific T cell responses in autoantibody-negative first-degree relatives of patients with type 1 diabetes
Authors
L. G. Petrich de Marquesini
J. Fu
K. J. Connor
A. J. Bishop
N. E. McLintock
C. Pope
F. S. Wong
C. M. Dayan
Publication date
01-07-2010
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Diabetologia / Issue 7/2010
Print ISSN: 0012-186X
Electronic ISSN: 1432-0428
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-010-1739-3

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