Insulin antibodies in insulin-dependent diabetics before insulin treatment
Abstract
A sensitive assay was used to measure the binding of iodine-125-labeled insulin in serum obtained from 112 newly diagnosed insulin-dependent diabetics before insulin treatment was initiated. Two groups of nondiabetics served as controls: children with a variety of diseases other than diabetes and nondiabetic siblings of insulin-dependent diabetics. Eighteen of the diabetics were found to have elevated binding and 36 were above the 95th percentile of control values. The insulin-binding protein is precipitated by antibody to human immunoglobulin G, has a displacement curve that is parallel and over the same concentration range as serum from long-standing insulin-dependent diabetics, and elutes from a Sephacryl S-300 column at the position of gamma globulin. These insulin antibodies are present in a large percentage of newly diagnosed, untreated diabetics and may be an immune marker of B-cell damage.
References
Characterization of circulating insulin and proinsulin-binding antibodies in autoimmune hypoglycemia
Citations
Natural history of preclinical IDDM in high risk siblings. Childhood Diabetes in Finland Study Group
A longitudinal study of insulin antibodies and anti-insulin cytotoxicity in type I diabetes mellitus
Investigations in children who were in utero at onset of insulin-dependent diabetes in their mothers
Cluster analysis of an insulin-dependent diabetic cohort towards the definition of clinical subtypes
Detection of antibodies against wheat germ agglutinin bound glycoproteins on the islet-cell membrane
Modulation and detection of IDDM by membrane associated antigens from the islet beta cell line NIT-1
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