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Diabetes, Vol 30, Issue 12 1051-1057, Copyright © 1981 by American Diabetes Association


ARTICLES

Complement-fixing Islet cell antibodies from some diabetic patients alter insulin release in vitro

P Sai, C Boitard, M Debray-Sachs, A Pouplard, R Assan and J Hamburger

To explore humoral immunity in insulin-dependent diabetic (IDDM) patients, we studied insulin release from isolated mouse islets stimulated by glucose + theophylline after incubation with the sera of these patients and complement. Eleven of 21 IDDM sera suppressed the stimulated insulin release while the arginine-stimulated glucagon release remained unchanged. Morphologic evidence and the trypan-blue exclusion test suggested that the suppression of insulin release was due to a cytotoxic effect of the sera. No beta-cell inhibition of morphologic damage was detectable in the presence of sera from 30 healthy subjects, 8 non-insulin-dependent diabetic patients, and 5 nondiabetic patients with autoimmune diseases. Beta-cell inhibition by IDDM sera was not observed when complement was omitted. After serum fractionation, the cytotoxic potency of IDDM sera was located in the immunoglobulin G fraction. Using human islets, insulin release was suppressed by 3 of 6 IDDM sera. Complement-dependent cytotoxicity was found in 1 of 5 recent-onset IDDM patients and 11 of 16 IDDM patients with autoimmune phenomena. It was associated in all cases with the presence of islet cell antibodies as detected by immunofluorescence, and with the presence of circulating lymphocytes which suppressed insulin release in vitro. Complement-fixing antibodies may contribute to the selective beta-cell damage in IDDM.
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This article has been cited by other articles:


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Clin. DiabetesHome page
W. E. Winter, N. Harris, and D. Schatz
Immunological Markers in the Diagnosis and Prediction of Autoimmune Type 1a Diabetes
Clin. Diabetes, October 1, 2002; 20(4): 183 - 191.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1981 by the American Diabetes Association.