Metabolic and immune effects of immunotherapy with proinsulin peptide in human new-onset type 1 diabetes
Author(s) -
Mohammad Alhadj Ali,
YF Liu,
Sefina Arif,
Danijela Tatović,
Hina Shariff,
Vivienne B. Gibson,
Norkhairin Yusuf,
Roman Baptista,
Martin Eichmann,
Nedyalko Petrov,
Susanne Heck,
Jennie H. M. Yang,
Timothy Tree,
Irma PujolAutonell,
Lorraine Yeo,
Lucas Baumard,
Rachel Stenson,
A Howell,
A.G. Clark,
Zoe Boult,
Jake Powrie,
Laura Adams,
F. Susan Wong,
Stephen D. Luzio,
Gareth Dunseath,
Kate Green,
Alison O’Keefe,
Graham Bayly,
Natasha Thorogood,
Robert Andrews,
Nicola Leech,
Frank Joseph,
Sunil Nair,
Susan T. Seal,
HoYee Cheung,
Craig A. Beam,
Robert K. Hills,
Mark Peakman,
Colin Dayan
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
science translational medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.819
H-Index - 216
eISSN - 1946-6242
pISSN - 1946-6234
DOI - 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaf7779
Subject(s) - proinsulin , medicine , immune system , immunotherapy , endocrinology , c peptide , immunology , insulin , cd8 , foxp3 , antigen , t cell
Immunotherapy using short immunogenic peptides of disease-related autoantigens restores immune tolerance in preclinical disease models. We studied safety and mechanistic effects of injecting human leukocyte antigen-DR4( DRB1*0401 )-restricted immunodominant proinsulin peptide intradermally every 2 or 4 weeks for 6 months in newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes patients. Treatment was well tolerated with no systemic or local hypersensitivity. Placebo subjects showed a significant decline in stimulated C-peptide (measuring insulin reserve) at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months versus baseline, whereas no significant change was seen in the 4-weekly peptide group at these time points or the 2-weekly group at 3, 6, and 9 months. The placebo group's daily insulin use increased by 50% over 12 months but remained unchanged in the intervention groups. C-peptide retention in treated subjects was associated with proinsulin-stimulated interleukin-10 production, increased FoxP3 expression by regulatory T cells, low baseline levels of activated β cell-specific CD8 T cells, and favorable β cell stress markers (proinsulin/C-peptide ratio). Thus, proinsulin peptide immunotherapy is safe, does not accelerate decline in β cell function, and is associated with antigen-specific and nonspecific immune modulation.
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