Background/Objective
In type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), the introduction of insulin is typically followed by a brief remission period, with subsequent gradual decline in beta‐cell function. Several studies described altered profile of circulating miRNAs (microRNAs) in T1DM patients and proposed them as biomarkers of associated pathologic processes.
Hypothesis
Serum miRNA expression profile reflects residual beta‐cell function and autoimmunity in T1DM.
Subjects
The profiling group included patients with: GCK‐MODY (N = 13), T1DM (N = 9), and 10 healthy controls. The longitudinal group included 34 patients with samples collected at diagnosis of T1DM and first, third, and fourth to eighth year since diagnosis.
Methods
We reanalyzed data from the profiling group for miRNAs differentially expressed between patients with T1DM, other types of diabetes and controls. Afterward, we shortlisted miRNAs on the basis of this reanalysis and literature review and quantified their expression with quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Additionally, we measured the levels of anti‐islet antibodies (islet cell antibodies, glutamic acid decarboxylase antibodies, IA2 antibodies, and ZnT8A) and C‐peptide concentrations across the four timepoints in the longitudinal group.
Results
miR‐24 and let‐7g serum expression differed significantly between GCK‐MODY, controls, and HbA1c‐matched T1DM patients; P < 0.05, false discovery rate < 0.05. Autoantibodies levels showed decreasing linear trend in repeated timepoints (all P < 0.0001). C‐peptide concentration peaked during the first year after diagnosis, corresponding to remission phase, and declined in consecutive measurements. This dynamic was evidenced for let‐7g expression levels (P = 0.0058).
Conclusions
The pattern of let‐7g expression change during the course of diabetes mirrors that of C‐peptide levels, hinting at this microRNA's association with the residual mass of the beta cells in patients with T1DM.