Diabetes Division, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts
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ABSTRACT |
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Scientific understanding of the cause of type 1 diabetes began with the discovery of inflammatory insulitis by von Meyenburg (1). Subsequently, Gepts (2) and others recognized that insulitis, an inflammatory lymphocyte infiltrate, was specifically associated with the islets of children with diabetes. These discoveries provided the first clue that ketosis-prone diabetes is caused by autoimmunity. The childs ß-cells are destroyed by his or her own immune system, specifically by T-cells. The work of Doniach, Bottazzo, and Drexhage (3) then revealed that people with type 1 diabetes circulate antibodies that, instead of targeting some infectious agent, target constituents of the ß-celleven insulin itself. These autoantibodies are often present long before disease onset and can be used to identify persons at risk (4). We now know that immunosuppressive drugs that interfere with the function of the inflammatory cells involved in these processes can arrest new-onset type 1 diabetes (5).
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CAUSES OF TYPE 1 DIABETES |
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THE CIRCLE OF TOLERANCE: PATHOGENESIS AND PREVENTION |
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Models for studying type 1 diabetes.
It has been difficult to discern the root causes of type 1 diabetes by studying people with the disease. Fortunately, ethically sound and humane animal research provides answers without putting people at risk (12). Two model systems have provided us with important information on the ways in which tolerance to ß-cells can be lost and restored. The BB rat was discovered in Canada in the mid 1970s (13). The nonobese diabetic mouse was discovered in Japan in the early 1980s (14). Both of these animals exhibit selective ß-cell destruction in the context of insulitis. As in humans, the disease is linked genetically to the MHC and is T-cell dependent. As in humans, autoantibodies are present.
Pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes: natural history.
The natural history of diabetes in the BB rat is comparable to that observed in humans at both the clinical and cellular levels. That history begins with islets in young animals that are normal in appearance and with respect to insulin secretory capability. In adolescence, progressive inflammatory infiltration of the islets begins and steadily increases in intensity. The infiltrate consists predominantly of T-cells, but macrophages, natural killer cells, natural killer T-cells, and B-cells also participate. Diabetes onset in the BB rat is typically accompanied by ketoacidosis. If the animal is treated with insulin and survives, the inflammatory process recedes, leaving islets devoid of ß-cells. Only glucagon and somatostatin cells remain. An important point to make about this and other animal models is that they permit us to assess and potentially to intervene in the disease at all of these stagespredisposition, pre-diabetes, onset, and clinical illnesssomething that is impossible to achieve in children at risk for diabetes.
Adoptive transfer.
One method for proving that a disease is autoimmune is to use the method of adoptive transfer. Adoptive transfer is an immunological procedure that can demonstrate the capacity of abnormal populations of T-cells to home to islets and cause diabetes. Adoptive transfer of diabetes was first shown using spleen cells removed from diabetic BB rats (15). After injection, these cells caused recipients to develop diabetes with all the characteristics seen in the donor. With the adoptive transfer method as a tool, it was clearly established for the first time that T-cells can mediate autoimmune diabetes. Similar results were obtained in NOD mice, and it was then shown in both BB rats and NOD mice that thymocytes (the precursors of peripheral T-cells) and bone marrow (the precursor tissue of thymocytes) also transfer the disease (13). Sadly, a few unfortunate cancer patients who received bone marrow from donors with type 1 diabetes have also become diabetic (16).
Prevention of type 1 diabetes.
With the knowledge that type 1 diabetes in the rat is an autoimmune disease, it was quickly hypothesized that therapies directed against T-cells might prevent it. Antilymphocyte serum and many immunosuppressive drugs were shown to prevent diabetes in both BB rats and NOD mice (17). Immunosuppressive drugs were then tried in children with new-onset diabetes (5), but these agents, which would have had to be taken for a lifetime, were ultimately deemed too toxic (18). We and many others quickly realized that what was needed was something to prevent the disease not by blocking the disease process, but rather by modulating it. In short, we needed to arrest the loss of tolerance (Fig. 1). Again, an early proof of principle in this area came from the BB rat.
Prevention by immunomodulation.
The prototype intervention to prevent autoimmune diabetes in the BB rat by immunomodulation was disarmingly simple. It had been discovered that these animals are congenitally deficient in lymphocytes. Simply returning to them a population of histocompatible lymphocytes from a normal donor completely prevented both diabetes and insulitis (19). The agent of protection appears to be a population of regulatory T-cells that express the CD4+ART2+ phenotype (20,21). This result eventually came to be viewed as one of the first "real-world" demonstrations of the existence of regulatory T-cells (22,23).
Immunological balance.
Transfusion, of course, has not become a therapy for diabetes. The proof of principle has remained valid, however, and contemporary research on stem cell transplantation for treating autoimmune diseases holds out considerable promise (2426).
Our early transfusion studies gave us a framework for understanding type 1 diabetes in particular and immunological tolerance in general. The gain and loss of tolerance can be viewed in terms of a balance, a concept initially formulated in our studies of the diabetes-prone or BBDP rat and schematized in Fig. 2. The prevention of diabetes in the BBDP rat by transfusion, we believe, represents the restoration of the animals immune system to equilibrium and a state of tolerance (27).
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These linkages of regulatory T-cell loss and viral infection to the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes in the rat are exciting because they hold out the promise of dissecting the pathways by which comparable perturbants may act on human children.
Virus-induced BBDR rat diabetes.
An association between viral infection and autoimmune diabetes in humans has been suspected, but remains unproven (30). A "proof of principle," however, is available from the BB rat. More than a decade ago, an outbreak of diabetes occurred in the Worcester colony of BBDR rats (29). It was a classic two-peak outbreak and was associated with the appearance of antibody against the KRV virus in the colony. Interestingly, sialodacryoadenitis virus had been present for years without causing diabetes. In general, it appears that naturally occurring infection with KRV leads to diabetes in about 1% of infected rats. The low penetrance is noteworthy given that the animals are inbred and share a common genetic susceptibility profile.
Similar epidemiological data exist for apparent outbreaks of diabetes in human populations, most recently in 1994 in Philadelphia (31), but the BBDR rat has provided an opportunity to do more than document the correlation. We and others have been able to go on to isolate the virus and document its diabetogenicity in controlled circumstances and then to formulate hypotheses about how it might cause diabetes. Initially it was thought that diabetes could be simply due to cytolytic infection of ß-cells, as Yoon et al. (32) once observed in a human child, and is known to occur in mice infected with encephalomyocarditis virus (33). But studies by Like and Guberski proved that this is not the case (34). Similarly, KRV does not cause exocrine pancreatitis. Yoon and colleagues hypothesized that diabetes might be the result of molecular mimicry. This hypothesis, in simple terms, holds that in the course of recognizing a viral protein, the immune system recognizes and targets a similar protein on ß-cells. The hypothesis was also disconfirmed, however, and Yoon and colleagues suggested that infection of these genetically susceptible animals resulted from something subtler than mimicry (35).
Because alteration of the immunoregulatory environment is an attractive hypothesis for explaining why only a fraction of genetically predisposed children become diabetic, it was appropriate to pursue this hypothesis in the BBDR rat. We infected BBDR rats with either KRV or a very closely homologous virus called H-1. The two viruses are about 98% identical at the level of DNA. We observed that about 40% of animals intentionally infected with KRV (107 PFU) become diabetic 24 weeks after infection. In contrast, the highly homologous parvovirus H-1 completely fails to induce diabetes (36). MHC-identical control Wistar Furth (WF) rats do not develop diabetes in response to either virus.
These data generate a new question as to the nature of the difference between KRV and H-1 in the BBDR rat. This question was pursued with additional studies. These revealed that KRV but not H-1 is associated with a decline in the percentage of CD4+CD25+ regulatory T-cells in the spleens of infected rats (36). This suggests the possibility that there may be virus-specific effects on the immune system that can alter the regulatory balance shown in Fig. 2, converting a genetic predisposition into overt autoimmune diabetes.
"Innate" immunity and type 1 diabetes.
The data presented to this point were derived largely from studies of the "adaptive" immune system. The adaptive immune system is responsible for pathogen-specific defense, long-lasting immunity after recovery or vaccination, and involves the MHC and receptors on T-cells. The "innate" immune system, in contrast, provides our first line of defense. It is relatively nonspecific and is activated by bacteria, parasites, viruses, and some chemicals through toll-like receptors (37). There is increasing recognition that innate immune responses may be involved in the expression of autoimmunity (38,39).
We were therefore prompted to study BBDR rats that received not only a viral infection but also a treatment to activate the innate immune response. We observed that the addition of a very brief exposure to poly I:C, which activates innate immunity by binding to toll-like receptor 3 (40), increased the frequency of diabetes to 100%, and accelerated onset. In control studies, infection with H-1 virus failed to induce diabetes with or without the addition of poly I:C (36).
The data provide a tantalizing suggestion as to how some but not all infectious agents may interact with the innate immune system to cause diabetes. The hope, of course, is that these kinds of studies, which obviously cannot be undertaken in children, may help us unravel the puzzling role of viral infection in type 1 diabetes and provide us with a better understanding of how identical twins can be discordant for type 1 diabetes.
Balance, tolerance, and autoimmunity in BB rats.
These data and data from many laboratories clearly suggest that an imbalance between autoreactivity and regulation may cause loss of tolerance and autoimmunity. Before leaving this subject, I would like to describe some new discoveries in the BBDP rat that explain how the imbalance comes about in these animals. BBDP rats, as mentioned previously, are severely lymphopenic from birth and they must remain lymphopenic for spontaneous diabetes to occur. Over a decade ago, Jacob et al. (41) identified a locus on chromosome 4 that was associated with this defect. In 2002, Hornum et al. (42) reported that the mutation that causes lymphopenia is a frameshift mutation in the Ian4L1 gene, a report confirmed by MacMurray et al. (43). The rat Ian4 protein is found principally if not exclusively in the mitochondria of lymphocytes. In the BBDP rat, this protein is not synthesized. We asked how this mutation causes lymphopenia and diabetes.
Apoptosis and Ian4L1.
Based on data from our laboratory and the Hagedorn Laboratory in Denmark, we believe that the mutation in Ian4L1 causes lymphopenia and immunological disequilibrium by inducing apoptosis of T-cells, in particular regulatory T-cells (44). The absence of Ian4 in T-cells causes dysfunction of mitochondria, with increased levels of stress-inducible chaperonins in the mitochondria and T-cell-specific spontaneous apoptosis (44). Both T-cell activation and caspase 8 inhibition prevent apoptosis, whereas transfection of T-cells with Ian4-specific siRNA recapitulated the apoptotic phenotype. The findings establish Ian4L1 as a novel, tissue-specific regulator of mitochondrial integrity. The arrest of apoptosis in activated T-cells may also explain how BBDP effector T-cells, which are activated to destroy islet tissue, are able to survive and cause diabetes. We would further hypothesize that apoptotic death of the regulatory T-cell population specifically results in disequilibration of the immune system and autoimmunity in this model system.
Heat shock proteins: a role in diabetes pathogenesis?
Although an imbalance between autoreactivity and regulation clearly may cause loss of tolerance and autoimmunity, the imbalance itself does not account for the specificity of the autoimmune process. Why ß-cells? The answer, speculatively, may have to do with the nature of secretory tissue in general and heat shock proteins (HSPs) in particular (45,46).
HSPs are found in all cells. There are more than 50 of them, and they account for about 5% of total cellular protein. In stressed cells, the percentage of HSPs may increase to 15 or even 20%. The stressors that increase HSPs include physical, chemical, and biological processes. The principal functions of HSPs include participation in protein folding and unfolding, protein degradation, and the assembly of multisubunit complexes.
Scientists have speculated on a role for HSPs in diabetes for more than a decade (47,48). Let me now offer you a 2003 view of this speculation. In the ß-cell, insulin messenger RNA is transcribed in the nucleus. Insulin protein is then translated from the mRNA in the endoplasmic reticulum, where specific classes of HSPs also reside. HSPs, as I have mentioned above, serve an important role in normal physiologic cell function. In the ß-cell, they facilitate the proper folding and three-dimensional conformation of newly synthesized normal insulin. Under conditions of cellular stress, HSPs are upregulated, and one might imagine that the folding of newly synthesized protein may be altered in such a way that the peptide now appears "antigenic." I would like to speculate that the generation of the insulin autoantibodies that are present in type 1 diabetes could be accounted for by this process. The same may occur with respect to other ß-cell proteins, thus accounting for the antibodies directed against GAD and IA-2.
The Akita mouse.
This of course is speculation. But consider some very recent observations that suggest that HSPs and mal-folded insulin could also be involved in the death of ß-cells. These observations come from the Akita mouse (49). Insulin in all mice is encoded by two genes. The insulin 1 gene in the Akita mouse is transcribed in the nucleus and translated in the endoplasmic reticulum, where HSPs aid in the proper folding of the insulin, as weve seen before. However, in the Akita mouse, the insulin 2 gene encodes a cysteine mutation that precludes formation of an essential disulfide bond. This prevents proper folding and processing of this insulin protein. The mutant, mal-folded proinsulin is retained in the endoplasmic reticulum of the pancreatic ß-cell, resulting in stress, upregulation of HSPs, and caspase-dependent apoptotic death of the ß-cell. The progressive loss of ß-cells over time in the Akita mouse results in diabetes (50). I invite readers to speculate as to whether this kind of process may be occurring in the ß-cells of children with type 1A and perhaps type 1B diabetes.
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THE CIRCLE OF TOLERANCE: TRANSPLANTATION |
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Status of islet transplantation.
Segmental pancreas transplantation is a reality, but its benefits are available to only a very few patients and comes with the price of major surgery and lifelong systemic immunosuppression. Islet transplantation has always been the preferred procedure, and there have been vast improvements in islet transplantation in only a few years. This has been due in part to the introduction of immunosuppressive agents that are less toxic not only to patients but also to their grafts. Thanks to the eximious efforts of Hering, Rajotte, Ricordi, Shapiro, and many others, we now have procedures that generate more islets and better islets. These improvements have enabled us to achieve insulin independence in the majority of persons given two or more islet grafts (51). A few fortunate recipients have now been insulin independent for >3 years, and we are still counting (52).
Our personal experience with the Edmonton protocol at the University of Massachusetts Medical School has been limited, but the results bring home in a personal way both the promise and the vexations of current islet transplantation technology. To date we have treated two patients, each of whom has received two islet grafts. One of the patients is insulin independent, and the other still requires a small amount of exogenous insulin to maintain her very fastidious level of control, but she is gratifyingly free of the debilitating attacks of hypoglycemia that afflicted her for years. This is the promise. Unfortunately, both patients, despite very thoughtful management of their immunosuppressive drugs, have had chronic side effects that are common with these medications. This is part of the downside of current technology.
Islet transplantation: the next step.
Where, then, do clinician scientists go next with islet transplantation? I believe that the key is tolerance induction (11). It is a form of therapy that will not require lifelong immunosuppression, will be safe for children, will have minimal side effects, and will have the durability that we all want for islet grafts. The question, of course, is whether we can achieve these goals. The strategy we have developed and have been exploring is the prevention of islet graft destruction by activated alloreactive T-cells.
Alloreactive T-cell activation.
Figure 3A summarizes the basic steps involved in the activation of an alloimmune response (10). The principle cell types involved are antigen-presenting cells (APCs) and alloreactive T-cells capable of recognizing alloantigen presented by APCs. The APCs express on their surface MHC molecules and process and then display peptides for evaluation by the immune system. In the case of diabetes, these APCs would present peptides from transplanted allogeneic islets. T-cell receptors recognize these allo-peptides in the context of MHC molecules. APCs also express constitutively the costimulatory molecule CD40, and T-cells express the costimulatory molecule CD28.
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T-cell costimulation blockade.
Knowledge of these three steps in alloreactive T-cell activation enabled us to develop a transplantation tolerance protocol based on costimulation blockade. The principle, shown schematically in Fig. 3B, uses a blocking anti-CD154 mAb. The tolerance induction procedure begins with step 1, but it takes place in the presence of blocking anti-CD154 mAb. Step 2 in the activation process does not take place. As a result, APCs do not become activated and do not express CD80 or CD86. The net result of this process is the conversion of the recipients alloreactive T-cells into tolerant T-cells (10). The actual protocol created to implement this theory uses, in addition to the anti-CD154 mAb, a transfusion of spleen cells from the donor (53). This donor-specific transfusion (DST) in effect prepares the alloreactive system and facilitates the ultimate tolerization of the system.
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ISLET ALLOGRAFT TOLERANCE INDUCTION |
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Mechanisms.
Achieving prolonged survival of allografts in treated mice holds out much promise for translation to clinical medicine, but therapeutics effective in small rodents seldom "scale up" to humans without difficulty. To facilitate the potential translation of these observations to the clinic, we have considered it essential to identify the mechanisms that underlie not only the success of the procedure but also its failures.
Our anabasis began with the formulation of three questions. First, what is the effect of the procedure on T-cells? We considered anergy, ignorance, regulation, and deletion as possibilities (10). Second, what is the role of the DST? Finally, what is the fate of alloreactive T-cells after costimulatory blockade with and without DST? To address these questions we hypothesized that tolerance based on DST and anti-CD154 mAb leads both to deletion of alloreactive cells and to the generation of regulatory cells.
To test this hypothesis, we devised a method for following alloreactive T-cells in vivo. The method is based on creating "synchimeric" mice (54). Because these were to be studies of the immune system and not diabetes per se, we used skin instead of islet grafts because, among all tissues, skin is most refractory to transplantation. Analysis of these synchimeric mice provided an answer to our initial question. Treatment of mice with a DST and anti-CD154 mAb rapidly leads to deletion of the alloreactive KB5 T-cells (54). The cells remain absent for several weeks and only slowly recover. Skin grafts on control animals were rejected. Grafts on mice treated with DST and anti-CD154 mAb survived for a prolonged period, many of them for nearly a year. Because the alloreactive cells began to recover some weeks after tolerance induction, the results suggest a possible explanation for the eventual loss of the graftsthe reappearance of new alloreactive T-cells generated in the bone marrow and processed in the thymus.
There was something else of note in the results of these studies. Even though the alloreactive T-cells returned in all the mice, grafts were lost in only about half of them. Why did those survive? Extrapolation of the balance hypothesis (Fig. 2) to the realm of transplantation tolerance suggested an answer. We hypothesized that in the mice with surviving grafts, there are populations of CD4+ regulatory T-cells, and we found evidence to support that hypothesis. Treatment of tolerized mice with successful grafts with an antibody that depletes CD4-positive cells was associated with activation of CD8+ alloreactive KB5 cells and prompt rejection of healthy grafts (54).
Figure 5 summarizes this part of our story. We believe that tolerance induction is a process that progresses through several stages. Induction of tolerance with DST and anti-CD154 mAb leads to the deletion of alloreactive T-cells. It also requires the presence of CD4-positive T-cells, cells that express the costimulatory molecule CTLA4, and the cytokine interferon- (55). After transplantation, the graft goes through a transition phase during which the alloreactive and regulatory forces come into balance. Permanence of grafts, we hypothesize, depends on an equilibrium that stably favors regulation over alloreactivity.
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To determine if autoimmune diabetes can be cured by costimulation blockade and islet transplantation, we used the NOD mouse model system. We found these animals to be completely resistant to tolerance induction (57). The refractoriness of the autoimmune mouse to curative transplantation was disconcerting, and to address the problem we adopted a different immunological strategythe induction of central tolerance. Treatment with DST and anti-CD154 mAb induces peripheral tolerance through a process that involves deletion of alloreactive cells and the generation of regulatory cells (10). Central tolerance is different and involves the elimination of autoreactivity by thymic selection. We hypothesized that the generation of central tolerance would succeed where peripheral tolerance induction had failed.
We sought to determine if costimulation blockade would facilitate generation of hematopoietic chimerism without need for the lethal conditioning normally required for bone marrow recipients (58). Recipient mice were either normal BALB/c mice (H2d) or diabetic NOD mice (H2g7). The bone marrow donors were MHC-mismatched C57BL/6 mice (H2b). The recipients were sublethally irradiated, given a bone marrow graft, and then treated with two injections only of anti-CD154 mAb. They were then assayed for the presence of donor C57BL/6 cells and for evidence of graft versus host disease. We confirmed in control mice that chimerism could be achieved with high-dose radiation alone, but at the price of graft versus host disease (GVHD) in all the recipients. In addition, we found that, using costimulation blockade, chimerism could be achieved with lower dose sublethal irradiation and without the development of GVHD. We interpreted the data to suggest that hematopoietic chimerism can thwart the recurrence of autoimmunity and induce donor-specific allotransplantation tolerance.
With this information in hand, we returned to the problem of curing autoimmune diabetes (58). Diabetic NOD mice were given sublethal irradiation, treated with anti-CD154 mAb and bone marrow from C57BL/6 donors, and then transplanted C57BL/6 islets and tested for recurrence of diabetes. Control NOD mice that were not chimeric promptly lost their islet grafts. In contrast, chimeric NOD mice with a C57BL/6 bone marrow allograft could clearly be cured of their diabetes, with some grafts lasting nearly a year (58). Histological study of successful islet grafts in a chimeric NOD mouse revealed cells that stain positively for both insulin and glucagon and the absence of infiltrating lymphocytes.
Bringing hematopoietic chimerism to the clinic.
The translation of these promising results to the clinic, however, will require overcoming significant barriers. Among these are the requirement for preparative conditioning of the recipient. In addition, it is well known that any reduction in the conditioning regimen might necessitate an increase in the number of stem cells required in order to achieve chimerism. This, in turn, could increase in the risk of GVHD. Our laboratorys search for solutions to these concerns has focused on costimulation blockade, adapting our islet and skin graft protocol for use in stem cell transplantation. We hypothesized that the induction of peripheral tolerance by DST plus anti-CD154 mAb treatment would facilitate stem cell engraftment and the generation of hematopoietic chimerism leading to establishment of central tolerance.
The protocol used to test the hypothesis has been published (59). The results showed that mice given both anti-CD154 mAb and a DST before bone marrow transplantation became chimeric and circulated 10% donor-origin mononuclear cells. In contrast, control mice given only anti-CD154 mAb and no DST before bone marrow all uniformly failed to become chimeric. In additional experiments, we found that that the chimerism in these mice is durable, lasting many months; that it can be generated using several different donor and recipient strain combinations; and that it is capable of supporting donor-specific transplantation tolerance.
Mechanism.
We next attempted to discern the underlying mechanisms using the KB5 synchimeric mouse as a bone marrow recipient. In untreated mice the percentage of alloreactive KB5 T-cells is relatively stable. We then studied two groups of mice that did not become chimeric after bone marrow engraftment. One group received anti-CD154 mAb and a bone marrow graft, the other anti-CD154 mAb and a DST. In both cases the result was what we expected. The number of alloreactive peripheral T-cells declined after treatment, but thereafter slowly recovered. In striking contrast, the chimeric mice that were given anti-CD154 mAb, a DST, and bone marrow had no detectable peripheral alloreactive T-cells for months. This, in addition, was also the only group that became chimeric (59). Why did this happen? It appears that intrathymic deletion of the developing alloreactive T-cells occurred, an observation that could have important implications for long-term durability of allografts.
What conclusions can we draw from these data? First, hematopoietic chimerism can be established using peripheral tolerance induction protocols. Second, we can, at least in rodents, obviate any need for myeloablative conditioning. Third, we can achieve permanent chimerism in the absence of GVHD. Fourth, we can generate central transplantation tolerance that supports allogeneic skin transplantation and will surely support islet transplantation.
On the verge of human transplantation tolerance.
All of these data suggest that tolerance induction has exceptional promise for translation to clinical medicine, but we are not there yet. Still it bears repeating that animal data often do not "scale" well to large animals and humans, and tolerance induction procedures like insulin and BCG (Bacille Calmette Guerin) that worked in mice have failed in children. There is no guarantee that transplantation tolerance will be an exception, and clearly safety issues like inadvertent viral infection at time of tolerance induction need to be addressed (60). Nonetheless, there is much promise and the omens are good. One example that addressed both scalability and safety was a nonhuman primate trial we conducted. In this experiment, cynomolgus monkeys were treated with DST and anti-CD154 mAb and given allogeneic skin grafts in an open, nonisolation facility. These grafts survived long term (A.A.R., unpublished data).
The circle of tolerance.
This completes this journey around the circle of tolerance. Learning how it can be lost in BB rats, NOD mice, and other models has given us reason to believe that methods will surely be found to prevent that loss. And for those individuals with type 1 diabetes, those same pathways of tolerance may soon be exploited to generate a rebirth of tolerance, this time for a curative islet graft.
As I conclude, I would like to restate my enduring optimism that the goal of cure and prevention of diabetes is within reach. I hold this belief for a number of reasons. The first relates to the exciting era in which we live. We have the ability to translate basic research to clinical trials. The second relates to advanced technology, including genomics, proteomics, nanotechnology, and siRNA. Third, diabetes research is endowed with committed, honest scientists with a passion for research and a desire to cure and prevent the disease and its complications. Finally, we must recognize that a critical component of diabetes research is the patient. I have had the honor to care for people who suffer with diabetes. These people have provided me and all my fellow clinician scientists with emotional support, encouragement, financial generosity, and willingness to participate in clinical trials. I feel they are the ultimate heroes in the field.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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I thank Drs. Dale Greiner and John Mordes for assistance.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Aldo A. Rossini, MD, Diabetes Division, 373 Plantation St., Suite 218, Worcester, MA 01605. E-mail: aldo.rossini{at}umassmed.edu
Received for publication October 14, 2003 and accepted in revised form October 30, 2003
APC, antigen-presenting cell; DST, donor-specific transfusion; GVHD, graft versus host disease; HSP, heat shock protein; KRV, Kilham rat virus; mAb, monoclonal antibody; MHC, major histocompatibility complex; VNTR, variable number of tandem repeats
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REFERENCES |
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