4.8 Article

Innate immunity and intestinal microbiota in the development of Type 1 diabetes

Journal

NATURE
Volume 455, Issue 7216, Pages 1109-U10

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature07336

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ADA [1-05-RA-142]
  2. JDRF [19-2006-1075, 4-2005-1168, 2005-204, 2007-353]
  3. NIH [DK45735, R37 AI46643, P30 DK63720, DK30292, DK70977, DK063452]
  4. W.M. Keck Foundation
  5. NIH/NIDDK Digestive Disease Research Core Center [DK42086]

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Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a debilitating autoimmune disease that results from T- cell- mediated destruction of insulin- producing beta-cells. Its incidence has increased during the past several decades in developed countries(1,2), suggesting that changes in the environment ( including the human microbial environment) may influence disease pathogenesis. The incidence of spontaneous T1D in nonobese diabetic ( NOD) mice can be affected by the microbial environment in the animal housing facility(3) or by exposure to microbial stimuli, such as injection with mycobacteria or various microbial products(4,5). Here we show that specific pathogen-free NOD mice lacking MyD88 protein ( an adaptor for multiple innate immune receptors that recognize microbial stimuli) do not develop T1D. The effect is dependent on commensal microbes because germ- free MyD88- negative NOD mice develop robust diabetes, whereas colonization of these germ- free MyD88- negative NOD mice with a defined microbial consortium ( representing bacterial phyla normally present in human gut) attenuates T1D. Wealso find thatMyD88 deficiency changes the composition of the distal gut microbiota, and that exposure to the microbiota of specific pathogen- free MyD88negativeNODdonors attenuates T1D in germ- free NOD recipients. Together, these findings indicate that interaction of the intestinal microbes with the innate immune system is a critical epigenetic factor modifying T1D predisposition.

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