Abstract

Type 1 diabetes mellitus is a multifactorial autoimmune disease characterised by selective destruction of beta cells in the islets of Langerhans. We have previously shown that IL-1 beta modulates beta cell function, causes beta cell death and induces expression changes in 82 out of 1815 protein spots detected by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DGE) in diabetes-prone bio-breeding (BB-DP) rat islets in vitro. The aim of this study was to describe the relevance of these proteins in the development of diabetes in vivo. Syngeneic neonatal islets ( n=200) were transplanted under the kidney capsule of 30-day-old BB-DP and control rats, removed to different time points after transplantation or at the onset of diabetes, and metabolically labelled with S(35)-methionine for 2-DGE. The 82 proteins were re-localised and followed. In addition, transplants were examined for expression of IL-1 beta mRNA by in situ hybridisation. All 82 proteins could be re-localised in all syngeneic transplants from BB-DP and control rats. A total of 60 of the 82 proteins were changed during development of diabetes. Of the 82 proteins, 32 were changed in expression at the onset of diabetes compared to non-diabetic BB-DP rats, and 25 of these were changed as by IL-1 beta in vitro. Highest expression of IL-1 beta mRNA was found at the onset of diabetes. IL-1 beta-induced protein expression changes in islets in vitro also occur in vivo and change in a complex pattern during the development of diabetes in the BB-DP rat. No single protein seems to be responsible for the development of diabetes, but rather the cumulative numbers of changes seem to interfere with the intracellular stability of the beta cell.

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