Impact of genetic and non-genetic factors in type 1 diabetes
✍ Scribed by Hawa, Mohammed Iqbal ;Beyan, Huriya ;Buckley, Lisa Rebecca ;Leslie, Richard David Graham
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 112 KB
- Volume
- 115
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-7299
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Type 1 insulin‐dependent diabetes is due to destruction of the insulin secreting cells of the islets of Langerhans. The disease is caused by non‐genetic, probably environmental, factors operating in a genetically susceptible host to initiate a destructive immune process. These unknown environmental factors may operate over a limited period either in early or later and to a variable degree, playing a particularly substantial role in adults. The environment then induces an immune process associated with destruction of the islet β cell that can be detected in early life and persists up to disease onset. Apart from an association with the insulin gene there is no evidence that genes associated with type 1 diabetes, including HLA and CTLA4 influence the targeting of the immune response to the insulin‐secreting cells. The critical period of immune activation is probably short and the process leading to diabetes probably has a long prodrome but of variable duration that determines the age at presentation with clinical disease. The amplification both of this immune response and the destructive process is in part genetically determined, involving HLA genes. The clinical spectrum of the disease process associated with type 1 diabetes is wide, encompassing insulin‐dependence, non‐insulin dependence and even transient impaired glucose tolerance. Type 1 diabetes presenting in adults, in contrast to children, is predominantly determined by non‐genetic factors with a reduced role for protective and susceptibility HLA alleles. Thus, the evidence is that genes involved in genetic susceptibility to type 1 diabetes operate predominantly in children not adults and in both amplify the immune response and the rate of disease progression. © 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
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