New research provides evidence that environmental factors, such as microbes that inhabit our intestines, may influence the incidence of type 1 diabetes.
To probe the microbes-diabetes connection, the research team modified the gut microbiota of mice by co-housing non-obese diabetic mice with animals that harbored altered microbes.
They found co-housed non-obese diabetic mice were less susceptible to diabetes. This co-housing led to an increased number of immune cells known as regulatory T cells in the gut, which likely contribute to this beneficial outcome, according to the researchers.
By giving mice antibodies that have been used to treat diabetes in human clinical trials, they also observed that same type of regulatory T cells were increased. These T cells were mobile, allowing them to migrate to inflamed organs and suppress the other pathogenic T cells that cause the development of type 1 diabetes.
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“The findings could lead to more effective strategies to prevent or treat type 1 diabetes and other autoimmune conditions by boosting protective T cells in gut-associated tissues,” says Hua Yu, a postdoctoral fellow at Yale University School of Medicine and first author of the paper.
Senior author and immunobiology professor Richard Flavell adds: “These strategies might include dietary, probiotic, or pharmaceutical approaches. For example, manipulating a patient’s diet to enrich good bacteria and increase intestinal regulatory T cells might be critically important in type 1 diabetes management.”
The paper appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Source: Yale University