β-Cell Mass and Type 1 Diabetes
Going, Going, Gone?
- 1Department of Immunobiology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
- 2Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Division of Endocrinology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- 3Department of Internal Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut
- Corresponding author: Kevan C. Herold, kevan.herold{at}yale.edu
Abstract
OBJECTIVE— β-Cell regeneration is a fundamental but elusive goal for type 1 diabetes research. Our objective is to review newer human and animal studies of β-cell destruction and regeneration and consider the implications for treatment of type 1 diabetes.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS— Recent human and animal studies of β-cell destruction and regeneration in type 1 diabetes are reviewed.
RESULTS— The loss of β-cells that characterizes type 1 diabetes reflects the net effects of destruction and regeneration. These processes have been examined in the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse; uncertainty remains about β-cell dynamics in humans. Islet inflammation stimulates β-cell replication that produces new insulin-positive cells. The regenerative process may tide the loss of overall β-cell function, but it also may enhance the autoimmune attack on β-cells by providing new epitopes. The highest rates of β-cell replication are at the time of diagnosis of diabetes in NOD mice, and if autoimmunity and islet inflammation are arrested, new β-cells are formed. However, the majority of β-cells after treatment with immune modulators such as anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody, and most likely during the “honeymoon” in human disease, are recovered β-cells that had been degranulated but present at the time of diagnosis of diabetes.
CONCLUSIONS— Residual β-cells play a significant role for the design of therapeutic trials: they not only may respond to combination therapies that include stimulants of metabolic function but are also the potential source of new β-cells.
Footnotes
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- Accepted March 3, 2008.
- Received December 24, 2007.
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