Detection of a Low-Grade Enteroviral Infection in the Islets of Langerhans of Living Patients Newly Diagnosed With Type 1 Diabetes

Lars Krogvold(Oslo University Hospital), Bjørn Edwin(Oslo University Hospital), Trond Buanes(Oslo University Hospital), Gun Frisk(Uppsala University), Oskar Skog(Uppsala University), Mahesh Anagandula(Uppsala University), Olle Korsgren(Uppsala University), Dag E. Undlien(Oslo University Hospital), Morten Christoph Eike(Oslo University Hospital), Sarah J. Richardson(University of Exeter), Pia Leete(University of Exeter), Noel G. Morgan(University of Exeter), Sami Oikarinen(Tampere University), Maarit Oikarinen(Tampere University), Jutta E. Laiho(Tampere University), Heikki Hyöty(Tampere University), Johnny Ludvigsson(Linköping University), Kristian F. Hanssen(Oslo University Hospital), Knut Dahl‐Jørgensen(Oslo University Hospital)
Diabetes
November 24, 2014
Cited by 307Open Access
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Abstract

The Diabetes Virus Detection study (DiViD) is the first to examine fresh pancreatic tissue at the diagnosis of type 1 diabetes for the presence of viruses. Minimal pancreatic tail resection was performed 3-9 weeks after onset of type 1 diabetes in six adult patients (age 24-35 years). The presence of enteroviral capsid protein 1 (VP1) and the expression of class I HLA were investigated by immunohistochemistry. Enterovirus RNA was analyzed from isolated pancreatic islets and from fresh-frozen whole pancreatic tissue using PCR and sequencing. Nondiabetic organ donors served as controls. VP1 was detected in the islets of all type 1 diabetic patients (two of nine controls). Hyperexpression of class I HLA molecules was found in the islets of all patients (one of nine controls). Enterovirus-specific RNA sequences were detected in four of six patients (zero of six controls). The results were confirmed in various laboratories. Only 1.7% of the islets contained VP1(+) cells, and the amount of enterovirus RNA was low. The results provide evidence for the presence of enterovirus in pancreatic islets of type 1 diabetic patients, which is consistent with the possibility that a low-grade enteroviral infection in the pancreatic islets contributes to disease progression in humans.


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