Background: Islet INS-IGF2 was examined as a possible autoantigen in type 1 diabetes. Results: INS-IGF2 expression was inversely related to donor HbA1c and glucose-stimulated insulin release. Autoantibodies doubly reactive with INS-IGF2 and insulin were more common in patients with type 1 diabetes than controls. Conclusion: INS-IGF2 is recognized by autoantibodies in type 1 diabetes. Significance: Autoantibodies doubly reactive with both INS-IGF2 and insulin may contribute to type 1 diabetes.
Aims/Introduction This study aimed to investigate the significance of zinc transporter 8 autoantibody (ZnT8A) in identifying and characterizing autoimmune‐mediated type 1 diabetes in Japanese individuals. Methods ZnT8A were determined in 324 patients with type 1 diabetes, 191 phenotypic type 2 diabetes and 288 healthy control individuals using bridging‐type enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay in addition to autoantibodies to glutamic acid decarboxylase and insulinoma‐associated antigen‐2. Results We set a cut‐off value of 10.0 U/mL, and 25% of the type 1 diabetic patients had ZnT8A levels exceeding this level. The prevalence of ZnT8A was significantly higher in patients with acute‐onset type 1 diabetes than in those with slowly progressive and fulminant type 1 diabetes (P < 0.05). ZnT8A were more frequent in patients aged ≤10 years, but less frequent in patients with duration ≥5 years (P < 0.05). ZnT8A were detected in 5.2% of phenotypic type 2 diabetic patients, with 90% of these being ZnT8A‐single‐positive. Furthermore, the ZnT8A levels in the phenotypic type 2 diabetes cohort (143.8 ± 194.9 U/mL) were significantly higher than those in the type 1 diabetes cohort (22.9 ± 8.3 U/mL, P < 0.05). In the acute‐onset and slowly progressive type 1 diabetic patients with duration ≤5 years, additional measurement of glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibodies significantly increased the disease sensitivity in patients aged ≤10 years, but not in patients aged ≥11 years (11.7 vs 3.6%, P < 0.05). Multivariate analysis showed that ZnT8A positivity was independently associated with age at sampling and insulinoma‐associated antigen‐2 autoantibody positivity. Conclusions These results suggest that the bridging‐type ZnT8A enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay might provide a valuable additional marker for Japanese patients with type 1 diabetes, which could, in turn, allow for an increase in the number of identifiable cases and differentiate clinical phenotypes.
The splice variant INS-IGF2 entails the preproinsulin signal peptide, the insulin B-chain, eight amino acids of the C-peptide and 138 unique amino acids from an ORF in the IGF2 gene. The aim of this study was to determine whether levels of specific INS-IGF2 autoantibodies (INS-IGF2A) were related to age at diagnosis, islet autoantibodies, HLA-DQ or both, in patients and controls with newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes. Patients (n = 676), 0-18 years of age, diagnosed with type 1 diabetes in 1996-2005 and controls (n = 363) were analysed for specific INS-IGF2A after displacement with both cold insulin and INS-IGF2 to correct for non-specific binding and identify double reactive sera. GADA, IA-2A, IAA, ICA, ZnT8RA, ZnT8WA, ZnT8QA and HLA-DQ genotypes were also determined. The median level of specific INS-IGF2A was higher in patients than in controls (P < 0.001). Irrespective of age at diagnosis, 19% (126/676) of the patients had INS-IGF2A when the cut-off was the 95th percentile of the controls (P < 0.001). The risk of INS-IGF2A was increased among HLA-DQ2/8 (OR = 1.509; 95th CI 1.011, 2.252; P = 0.045) but not in 2/2, 2/X, 8/8, 8/X or X/X (X is neither 2 nor 8) patients. The association with HLA-DQ2/8 suggests that this autoantigen may be presented on HLA-DQ trans-heterodimers, rather than cis-heterodimers. Autoantibodies reactive with both insulin and INS-IGF2A at diagnosis support the notion that INS-IGF2 autoimmunity contributes to type 1 diabetes.
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