Sustained beta cell apoptosis in patients with long-standing type 1 diabetes: indirect evidence for islet regeneration?

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Sustained beta cell apoptosis in patients with long-standing type 1 diabetes: indirect evidence for islet regeneration?
المؤلفون: Peter C. Butler, Robert A. Rizza, Anil Bhushan, Alexandra E. Butler, Juris J. Meier
المصدر: Diabetologia. 48(11)
سنة النشر: 2005
مصطلحات موضوعية: Adult, Blood Glucose, Male, medicine.medical_specialty, Adolescent, CD3 Complex, Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, medicine.medical_treatment, T-Lymphocytes, Population, Apoptosis, Cell Count, Biology, In Vitro Techniques, medicine.disease_cause, Autoimmunity, Internal medicine, Diabetes mellitus, Insulin-Secreting Cells, Internal Medicine, medicine, Humans, Regeneration, education, Beta (finance), Pancreas, Aged, Autoimmune disease, Type 1 diabetes, geography, education.field_of_study, geography.geographical_feature_category, Insulin, Macrophages, Middle Aged, medicine.disease, Islet, Fibrosis, Endocrinology, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1, Case-Control Studies, Immunology, Female
الوصف: Type 1 diabetes is widely held to result from an irreversible loss of insulin-secreting beta cells. However, insulin secretion is detectable in some people with long-standing type 1 diabetes, indicating either a small population of surviving beta cells or continued renewal of beta cells subject to ongoing autoimmune destruction. The aim of the present study was to evaluate these possibilities.Pancreatic sections from 42 individuals with type 1 diabetes and 14 non-diabetic individuals were evaluated for the presence of beta cells, beta cell apoptosis and replication, T lymphocytes and macrophages. The presence and extent of periductal fibrosis was also quantified.Beta cells were identified in 88% of individuals with type 1 diabetes. The number of beta cells was unrelated to duration of disease (range 4-67 years) or age at death (range 14-77 years), but was higher (p0.05) in individuals with lower mean blood glucose. Beta cell apoptosis was twice as frequent in type 1 diabetes as in control subjects (p0.001), but beta cell replication was rare in both groups. The increased beta cell apoptosis in type 1 diabetes was accompanied by both increased macrophages and T lymphocytes and a marked increase in periductal fibrosis (p0.001), implying chronic inflammation over many years, consistent with an ongoing supply of beta cells.Most people with long-standing type 1 diabetes have beta cells that continue to be destroyed. The mechanisms underlying increased beta cell death may involve both ongoing autoimmunity and glucose toxicity. The presence of beta cells despite ongoing apoptosis implies, by definition, that concomitant new beta cell formation must be occurring, even after long-standing type 1 diabetes. We conclude that type 1 diabetes may be reversed by targeted inhibition of beta cell destruction.
تدمد: 0012-186X
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::1592b7de4c6eea339b098f09288dd117Test
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16193285Test
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....1592b7de4c6eea339b098f09288dd117
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE