CD8+ T-cell responses identify β-cell autoimmunity in human type 1 diabetes

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Abstract

Despite the understanding that type 1 diabetes pathogenesis is mediated by T-cells, detection of these rare lymphocytes remains largely elusive. Suitable T-cell assays are highly needed, since they could offer preclinical diagnoses and immune surrogate end points for clinical trials. Although CD4+ T-cell assays have met with limited success, CD8+ T-cells are increasingly recognized as key actors in the diabetes of the NOD mouse. CD8 + T-cells are likely to play a role also in humans and may provide new markers of β-cell autoimmunity. Taking advantage of a panel of HLA-A2-restricted β-cell epitopes derived from preproinsulin, GAD, and islet glucose-6-phosphatase catalytic subunit-related protein (IGRP), we have implemented an islet-specific CD8+ T-cell interferon-γ enzyme-linked immunospot (ISL8Spot) assay. The ISL8Spot assay is capable of detecting and quantifying β-cell-reactive CD8+ T-cells directly ex vivo, without any preliminary expansion, using either fresh or frozen samples. Positive ISL8Spot responses separate new-onset diabetic and healthy samples with high accuracy (86% sensitivity, 91% specificity), using as few as five immunodominant epitopes. Moreover, sensitivity reaches 100% when the ISL8Spot assay is complemented by antibody determinations. Combination of CD8+ T-cell measurements with immune intervention strategies may open new avenues toward type 1 diabetes prediction and prevention. © 2007 by the American Diabetes Association.

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APA

Mallone, R., Martinuzzi, E., Blancou, P., Novelli, G., Afonso, G., Dolz, M., … Van Endert, P. (2007). CD8+ T-cell responses identify β-cell autoimmunity in human type 1 diabetes. Diabetes, 56(3), 613–621. https://doi.org/10.2337/db06-1419

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