Summary
Virus infection has been proposed as an initiating factor in the aetiology of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). We have examined lymphocyte proliferation to virus proteins which demonstrate sequence similarity to the beta-cell autoantigen glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD)65. The magnitude and frequency of response to coxsackie B viruses and adenovirus in a T-cell proliferation assay was significantly higher in a group of recently diagnosed IDDM subjects than in non-diabetic control subjects. The frequency of positive response to the coxsackie B viruses was also significantly higher in IDDM subjects expressing the DRB 1*04 major histocompatibility complex (MHC) haplotype than the DRB 1*03 haplotype. There was no evidence that non-aspartate residue at position 57 of DQB 1 genes influenced virus responses in the IDDM group. The coxsackie homology was in amino acids 258–266 and the adenovirus homology was in amino acids 509–524 of GAD65. Both these regions are suspected to be T-cell epitopes in IDDM. These results indicate a disease and MHC class II association between coxsackie B virus infection and IDDM and an association between adenovirus infection and IDDM. [Diabetologia (1996) 39: 1318–1324]
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Received: 1 February 1996 and in revised form: 6 May 1996
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Jones, D., Crosby, I. Proliferative lymphocyte responses to virus antigens homologous to GAD65 in IDDM. Diabetologia 39, 1318–1324 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1007/s001250050576
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s001250050576