Maternal Type 1 Diabetes Reduces Autoantigen-Responsive CD4+ T Cells in Offspring.
Jan KnoopAnne EugsterAnita GavrisanRamona LickertEva-Maria SedlmeierSevina DietzAnnett LindnerKatharina WarnckeNadine HummelAnette-Gabriele ZieglerEzio BonifacioPublished in: Diabetes (2020)
Autoimmunity against pancreatic β-cell autoantigens is a characteristic of childhood type 1 diabetes (T1D). Autoimmunity usually appears in genetically susceptible children with the development of autoantibodies against (pro)insulin in early childhood. The offspring of mothers with T1D are protected from this process. The aim of this study was to determine whether the protection conferred by maternal T1D is associated with improved neonatal tolerance against (pro)insulin. Consistent with improved neonatal tolerance, the offspring of mothers with T1D had reduced cord blood CD4+ T-cell responses to proinsulin and insulin, a reduction in the inflammatory profile of their proinsulin-responsive CD4+ T cells, and improved regulation of CD4+ T cell responses to proinsulin at 9 months of age, as compared with offspring with a father or sibling with T1D. Maternal T1D was also associated with a modest reduction in CpG methylation of the INS gene in cord blood mononuclear cells from offspring with a susceptible INS genotype. Our findings support the concept that a maternal T1D environment improves neonatal immune tolerance against the autoantigen (pro)insulin.
Keyphrases
- type diabetes
- cord blood
- high fat diet
- glycemic control
- birth weight
- insulin resistance
- pregnancy outcomes
- cardiovascular disease
- anti inflammatory
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- adipose tissue
- oxidative stress
- single cell
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- weight loss
- transcription factor
- drug delivery
- bone marrow
- skeletal muscle