Enteroviral infections in the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes: new insights for therapeutic intervention
Richardson, SJ; Morgan, N
Date: 29 July 2018
Article
Journal
Current Opinion in Pharmacology
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
Abstract
The development of islet autoimmunity and type 1 diabetes has long been linked with enteroviral
infection but a causal relationship has proven hard to establish. This is partly because much of the
epidemiological evidence derives from studies of neutralising antibody generation in blood samples
while much less attention has been ...
The development of islet autoimmunity and type 1 diabetes has long been linked with enteroviral
infection but a causal relationship has proven hard to establish. This is partly because much of the
epidemiological evidence derives from studies of neutralising antibody generation in blood samples
while much less attention has been paid to the pancreatic beta cells as a site of infection. Nevertheless,
recent studies have revealed that beta cells express specific enteroviral receptors and that they can
sustain a productive enteroviral infection. Importantly, they can also mount antiviral responses which
attenuate viral replication and may favour the establishment of a persistent enteroviral infection.
Together, these responses combine to create the Trojan horse by which enteroviruses might
precipitate islet autoimmunity
Institute of Biomedical & Clinical Science
Collections of Former Colleges
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