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16.12.2008 Metabolic disturbances indicate progress of the disease even years in advance
Finnish scientists have reported a breakthrough in the attempts to understand the development of type 1 diabetes. They discovered disturbances in lipid and amino acid metabolism in children who later progressed to type 1 diabetes, also known as juvenile diabetes. The alterations preceded the autoimmune response by months to years. The study may prompt new approaches for prediction and prevention of type 1 diabetes in pre-autoimmune phase of the disease.
The results of the Finnish research team, which consists of
scientists from VTT and the Universities of Turku, Oulu and Tampere,
have been published on 15 December 2008, in the Journal of Experimental
Medicine.
Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease in which the
immune system attacks the insulin producing pancreatic beta cells. The
gradual loss of beta cells results in life-long dependence on exogenous
insulin.
At the moment, the earliest identifiable process in the
pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes has been the development of
autoimmunity to pancreatic beta cells in the measurable form of islet
autoantibodies. Although the autoimmunity usually precedes the clinical
disease by months to years, its occurrence may already be too late for
therapeutic approaches aimed at preventing progression to overt
diabetes. The initiators of the autoimmune response have remained
unknown and the mechanisms supporting progression towards beta cell
failure have been poorly understood, making discovery of effective
prevention a challenge. The results of the SYSDIPP project, which was
supported by the Tekes FinnWell Program, bring significant new
information for combating the disease.
The SYSDIPP project has
made use of metabolomics. Metabolomics systematically studies the
chemical fingerprints in cells, tissues and biofluids in a given
physiological and environmental context. The metabolic phenotype is
sensitive to subtle factors such as age, lifestyle, nutrition and the
microbe environment of the intestines. Changes in the concentrations of
metabolites may thus reflect both genetic and environmental factors
influencing later susceptibility to chronic diseases.
In 1994,
an ongoing birth cohort study (DIPP, the Type 1 Diabetes Prediction and
Prevention study) was launched in Finland, supported by the Juvenile
Diabetes Research Foundation International. Over a period of 14 years,
more than 130 000 newborn infants have been screened for genetic risk
and over 8 000 at-risk children are being regularly followed.
The
research team was led by Prof. Matej Orešič from VTT Technical Research
Centre of Finland and Prof. Olli Simell from University of Turku. Also
Professors Mikael Knip, Jorma Ilonen, and Riitta Lahesmaa together with
Dr. Riitta Veijola and Dr.Tuula Simelltook part in the study, which
investigated metabolic profiles of DIPP children prospectively from
birth. The research team has published the results in The Journal of
Experimental Medicine on 15 December 2008. The article reports the
discovery of metabolic disturbances that precede the autoimmune
response in children who later progress to type 1 diabetes.
The
investigators found that the individuals who developed diabetes had
reduced serum levels of succinic acid and phosphatidylcholine at birth,
reduced levels of triglycerides and antioxidant ether phospholipids
throughout the follow-up and increased levels of proinflammatory
lysophosphatidylcholines several months prior to autoimmunity to
pancreatic beta cells. The metabolic profile was partially normalized
following the autoimmune response, suggesting autoimmunity may be a
relatively late physiological response to the early metabolic
disturbances. The observed lipid changes were not attributable to
HLA-associated genetic risk.
Metabolic profiling at early age
may therefore aid in determining the risk of type 1 diabetes. The
reported findings imply that metabolic or immunomodulatory
interventions during the pre-autoimmune period may be used as a new
potential strategy for prevention of type 1 diabetes.
The
incidence of type 1 diabetes among children and adolescents has
increased markedly in the Western countries during recent decades. The
incidence has reached record levels in Finland, where currently 1 child
out of 120 develops type 1 diabetes before the age of 15 years. The
annual incidence is increasing at accelerated rate, with the number of
new cases expected to double in the next 15 years.
Further information
Prof. Matej Orešič (
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
)
http://sysbio.vtt.fi/
Reference
Orešič,
M., Simell, S., Sysi-Aho, M., Näntö-Salonen, K., Seppänen-Laakso, T.,
Parikka, V. , Katajamaa, M., Hekkala, A., Mattila, I., Keskinen, P.,
Yetukuri, L., Reinikainen, A., Lähde, J., Suortti, T., Hakalax, J.,
Simell, T., Hyöty, H., Veijola, R., Ilonen, J., Lahesmaa, R., Knip,
M., Simell, O. Dysregulation of lipid and amino acid metabolism
precedes islet autoimmunity in children who later progress to type 1
diabetes, J. Exp. Med.(2008); doi: 10.1084/jem.20081800
Link to The Journal of Experimental Medicine website presenting the study:
http://jem.rupress.org/
