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Study
of Human Pancreases links Virus to cause of Type 1 Diabetes
ScienceDaily
(Mar. 6,2009)-
A team of researchers from the Peninsula Medical School in the
South West of England, the University of Brighton and the Department
of Pathology at Glasgow Royal Infirmary, has found that a common
family of viruses (enteroviruses) may play an important role in
triggering the development of diabetes, particularly in children.
These viruses usually cause symptoms similar to the common cold,
or vomiting and diarrhea. However, the team has now provided clear
evidence that they are also found frequently in the pancreas of
people who develop diabetes.
The research,
which was carried out at Peninsula Medical School and funded by
Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF), is published March
6, 2009, in the European Diabetes journal, Diabetologia. It involved
the detailed study of a unique collection of pancreases from 72
young people who died less than a year after the diagnosis of type
1 diabetes.
Type 1 diabetes
usually starts in young people and results from the destruction
of the insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas. Patients who
develop type1 diabetes have to take multiple daily injections of
insulin for the rest of their lives, and the condition affects around
300,000 people in the UK, including 20,000 children under the age
of 15. There are a further estimated 440,000 cases of type 1 diabetes
in children worldwide, with more than a fifth living in Europe.
It is accepted
that children who develop type 1 diabetes inherit a genetic susceptibility
to the disease, but studies of identical twins have shown that when
one twin has the
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disease,
the other twin will only have approximately a 40 per cent chance
of developing diabetes-suggesting that factors additional to inheritance
are also involved.
It
has long been speculated that viruses might play a role in causing
type1 diabetes by infecting the beta cells of the pancreas. This
new research, which has made use of unique source material collected
in Glasgow, is the first to provide evidence supporting this theory
in such a large number of pancreases from young people recently
diagnosed with the disease. It has revealed that more than 60 per
cent of the organs contained evidence of enteroviral infection of
the beta cells. By contrast, infected beta cells were hardly ever
seen in tissue samples from 50 children without the condition.
The
new research suggests that enteroviral infection of the beta cells
in children with a genetic disposition to type1 diabetes may initiate
a process whereby the body's immune system identifies beta cells
as 'foreign' and rejects them, as it would a transplanted organ.
An
extension of the study to adults with type 2 diabetes showed that
a large proportion (40 per cent) of these patients also had enteroviral
infection in their beta cells. This compared with only 13 percent
of non-diabetic adults of the same age group. Unlike type1 diabetes,
type 2 diabetes usually starts in adults and is associated with
obesity. The beta cells are not destroyed in this disease but their
ability to make insulin is compromised. The way that enteroviruses
might contribute to the development of type 2 diabetes has not been
established but it is known from laboratory studies that an enteroviral
infection of beta cells reduces their ability to release insulin.
It is possible that in people who are obese (where there is a greatly
increased demand for insulin
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secretion) a
reduction of beta cell function, secondary to enteroviral infection,
may be sufficient to trigger type 2 diabetes-although more research
is required to confirm this.
Overall,
the findings of this new study suggest that vaccination in childhood
to prevent enteroviral infe3ctions of beta cells might be an attractive
means to reduce the incidence of both common forms of diabetes.
However, there are up to 100 different strains of enterovirus and
more research will be needed to identify which particular enteroviruses
are associated with the development of diabetes, and whether vaccines
could be developed to prevent their spread.
Professor
Noel Morgan from the Peninsula Medical School commented, "The next
stages of research-to identify which enteroviruses are involved,
how the beta-cells are changed by infection and the ultimate goal
to develop an effective vaccine- will lead to findings which we
hope will drastically reduce the number of people around the world
who develop type1 diabetes, and potentially type 2 diabetes as well."
Professor
Adrian Bone from the University of Brighton said, "Viruses have
been shown to be capable of both inducing and preventing the development
of diabetes. The true importance of our present study lies in the
translation of these earlier experimental findings into meaningful
observations in children and young people with diabetes."
Adapted from materials provided by The Peninsula College of Medicine
and Dentistry, via EurekAlert! The Peninsula College of Medicine
and Dentistry (2009, March 6). Study Of Human Pancreases Links Virus
To Cause Of Type1 Diabetes. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 7, 2009,
from:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/
releases/2009/03/
090305141639.htm
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