Published May 6, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Clostridia and Enteroviruses as Synergistic Triggers of Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus

  • 1. Michigan State University
  • 2. University of Chicago

Description

What triggers type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM)? One common assumption is that triggers are individual microbes that mimic autoantibody targets such as insulin (INS). However, most microbes highly associated with T1DM pathogenesis, such as coxsackieviruses (COX), lack INS mimicry and have failed to induce T1DM in animal models. Using proteomic similarity search techniques, we found that COX actually mimicked the INS receptor (INSR). Clostridia were the best mimics of INS. Clostridia antibodies cross-reacted with INS in ELISA experiments, confirming mimicry. COX antibodies cross-reacted with INSR. Clostridia antibodies further bound to COX antibodies as idiotype–anti-idiotype pairs conserving INS–INSR complementarity. Ultraviolet spectrometry studies demonstrated that INS-like Clostridia peptides bound to INSR-like COX peptides. These complementary peptides were also recognized as antigens by T cell receptor sequences derived from T1DM patients. Finally, most sera from T1DM patients bound strongly to inactivated Clostridium sporogenes, while most sera from healthy individuals did not; T1DM sera also exhibited evidence of anti-idiotype antibodies against idiotypic INS, glutamic acid decarboxylase, and protein tyrosine phosphatase non-receptor (islet antigen-2) antibodies. These results suggest that T1DM is triggered by combined enterovirus-Clostridium (and possibly combined Epstein–Barr-virus-Streptococcal) infections, and the probable rate of such co-infections approximates the rate of new T1DM diagnoses.

Data availability

The majority of the data compiled for this study is presented herein; all data not explicitly described are available on request from the primary investigator.

Files

Clostridia-and-Enteroviruses-as-Synergistic-Triggers-of-Type-1-Diabetes-Mellitus.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.3390/ijms24098336
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5872

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Chemistry