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Potential
new treatment for insulin-dependent diabetes
Scientists in Japan have found a way to improve on a promising
diabetes treatment. In the October 3 issue of The Journal
of Experimental Medicine, Masaru Taniguchi and colleagues
report that transplanted insulin-producing cells survive better
when the activation of a specific type of immune cell is blocked.
Insulin-dependent diabetes is caused by the destruction of
the insulin-producing cells in the pancreas (called islet
cells) by auto-reactive T cells. The loss of insulin results
in an inability to control blood sugar levels. Transplantation
of islet cells is an effective way to restore insulin production,
but this therapy requires life-long immunosuppression of the
patient. Even with immunosuppression, up to half of the transplanted
cells are rapidly destroyed by the patient's own T cells.
Taniguchi's group used a
mouse model to show that a subset of cells known as natural
killer T (NKT) cells instigates the rapid destruction of the
islet cells. NKT cells become activated -- likely in response
to the stress of the transplant procedure -- and produce an
inflammatory molecule called interferon (IFN)-gamma, which
helps to activate the auto-reactive T cells. In mice that
lack NKT cells or are unable to produce IFN-gamma, the transplanted
cells survived.
The group went on to show
that multiple doses of a drug (called alpha-galactosylceramide),
which activates NKT cells in single doses, caused these cells
to produce less IFN-gamma. The decreased IFN-gamma production
protected the transplanted islet cells. The authors thus suggest
that multiple doses of the same compound, currently in clinical
trials in humans, might help prevent the early loss of transplanted
islet cells in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes.
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