Prevention of type 1 diabetes by inducing subclinical dermatitis on a small area

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Prevention of type 1 diabetes by inducing subclinical dermatitis on a small area. / Engkilde, Kaare; Johansen, Jeanne Duus; Hansen, Axel Jacob Kornerup; Menné, Thorkild; Buschard, Karsten.

In: Diabetes - Metabolism: Research and Reviews (Print Edition), Vol. 27, 2011, p. 954-958.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Engkilde, K, Johansen, JD, Hansen, AJK, Menné, T & Buschard, K 2011, 'Prevention of type 1 diabetes by inducing subclinical dermatitis on a small area', Diabetes - Metabolism: Research and Reviews (Print Edition), vol. 27, pp. 954-958. https://doi.org/10.1002/dmrr.1280

APA

Engkilde, K., Johansen, J. D., Hansen, A. J. K., Menné, T., & Buschard, K. (2011). Prevention of type 1 diabetes by inducing subclinical dermatitis on a small area. Diabetes - Metabolism: Research and Reviews (Print Edition), 27, 954-958. https://doi.org/10.1002/dmrr.1280

Vancouver

Engkilde K, Johansen JD, Hansen AJK, Menné T, Buschard K. Prevention of type 1 diabetes by inducing subclinical dermatitis on a small area. Diabetes - Metabolism: Research and Reviews (Print Edition). 2011;27:954-958. https://doi.org/10.1002/dmrr.1280

Author

Engkilde, Kaare ; Johansen, Jeanne Duus ; Hansen, Axel Jacob Kornerup ; Menné, Thorkild ; Buschard, Karsten. / Prevention of type 1 diabetes by inducing subclinical dermatitis on a small area. In: Diabetes - Metabolism: Research and Reviews (Print Edition). 2011 ; Vol. 27. pp. 954-958.

Bibtex

@article{c75b129c9fd1401c86aeb102d238b0f3,
title = "Prevention of type 1 diabetes by inducing subclinical dermatitis on a small area",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: We have previously epidemiologically shown that type 1 diabetes is inversely associated with contact allergy. This finding is intriguing as type 1 diabetes and contact allergy are two completely different diseases, although T cells are involved in both diseases. The objective of this study was therefore to experimentally study the effect of contact allergens on the development of diabetes in non-obese diabetic mice. METHODS: Non-obese diabetic mice 4 weeks of age were separated into seven groups. One group was exposed to tapped water every 14th day, whereas the remaining six groups were split into sensitizations groups or elicitation groups (exposure every 14th day). These groups were then treated with one of the selected contact allergens (PPD or DNCB) or vehicle (AOO). All groups received the sensitizing treatment regime, and hereafter only the elicitation groups were further treated. If the blood glucose reached 14 mM, the mice were considered diabetic and euthanized. Cardiac heart blood was drawn at euthanization, and a Luminex analysis was done on the serum. RESULTS: We showed that repeated application of a low dose of PPD reduced the incidence of diabetes compared to application with water (47% versus 93%, p = 0.004). The rest of the groups developed diabetes with a cumulative incidence rate above 80%. The Luminex cytokine analysis revealed no differences between the groups, and no elevated cytokine level suggested a systemic response. Dermatitis was not noticeable by visual inspection, a histological examination, however, revealed a slight infiltration in the ears in the elicitation groups exposed to contact allergens. CONCLUSION: This study showed that repeated topical application on the ears with a contact allergen could prevent the development of diabetes in non-obese diabetic mice. The contact allergens gave a non-visible, subclinical dermatitis on the application site. Activation of NKT cells to the ear lymph nodes seems to be involved. ",
author = "Kaare Engkilde and Johansen, {Jeanne Duus} and Hansen, {Axel Jacob Kornerup} and Thorkild Menn{\'e} and Karsten Buschard",
note = "Special Issue: Proceedings of the 11th Annual Meeting of the Immunology of Diabetes Society, Incheon, Korea; null ; Conference date: 31-10-2010",
year = "2011",
doi = "10.1002/dmrr.1280",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "954--958",
journal = "Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews",
issn = "1520-7552",
publisher = "Wiley",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Prevention of type 1 diabetes by inducing subclinical dermatitis on a small area

AU - Engkilde, Kaare

AU - Johansen, Jeanne Duus

AU - Hansen, Axel Jacob Kornerup

AU - Menné, Thorkild

AU - Buschard, Karsten

N1 - Conference code: 11

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - OBJECTIVE: We have previously epidemiologically shown that type 1 diabetes is inversely associated with contact allergy. This finding is intriguing as type 1 diabetes and contact allergy are two completely different diseases, although T cells are involved in both diseases. The objective of this study was therefore to experimentally study the effect of contact allergens on the development of diabetes in non-obese diabetic mice. METHODS: Non-obese diabetic mice 4 weeks of age were separated into seven groups. One group was exposed to tapped water every 14th day, whereas the remaining six groups were split into sensitizations groups or elicitation groups (exposure every 14th day). These groups were then treated with one of the selected contact allergens (PPD or DNCB) or vehicle (AOO). All groups received the sensitizing treatment regime, and hereafter only the elicitation groups were further treated. If the blood glucose reached 14 mM, the mice were considered diabetic and euthanized. Cardiac heart blood was drawn at euthanization, and a Luminex analysis was done on the serum. RESULTS: We showed that repeated application of a low dose of PPD reduced the incidence of diabetes compared to application with water (47% versus 93%, p = 0.004). The rest of the groups developed diabetes with a cumulative incidence rate above 80%. The Luminex cytokine analysis revealed no differences between the groups, and no elevated cytokine level suggested a systemic response. Dermatitis was not noticeable by visual inspection, a histological examination, however, revealed a slight infiltration in the ears in the elicitation groups exposed to contact allergens. CONCLUSION: This study showed that repeated topical application on the ears with a contact allergen could prevent the development of diabetes in non-obese diabetic mice. The contact allergens gave a non-visible, subclinical dermatitis on the application site. Activation of NKT cells to the ear lymph nodes seems to be involved.

AB - OBJECTIVE: We have previously epidemiologically shown that type 1 diabetes is inversely associated with contact allergy. This finding is intriguing as type 1 diabetes and contact allergy are two completely different diseases, although T cells are involved in both diseases. The objective of this study was therefore to experimentally study the effect of contact allergens on the development of diabetes in non-obese diabetic mice. METHODS: Non-obese diabetic mice 4 weeks of age were separated into seven groups. One group was exposed to tapped water every 14th day, whereas the remaining six groups were split into sensitizations groups or elicitation groups (exposure every 14th day). These groups were then treated with one of the selected contact allergens (PPD or DNCB) or vehicle (AOO). All groups received the sensitizing treatment regime, and hereafter only the elicitation groups were further treated. If the blood glucose reached 14 mM, the mice were considered diabetic and euthanized. Cardiac heart blood was drawn at euthanization, and a Luminex analysis was done on the serum. RESULTS: We showed that repeated application of a low dose of PPD reduced the incidence of diabetes compared to application with water (47% versus 93%, p = 0.004). The rest of the groups developed diabetes with a cumulative incidence rate above 80%. The Luminex cytokine analysis revealed no differences between the groups, and no elevated cytokine level suggested a systemic response. Dermatitis was not noticeable by visual inspection, a histological examination, however, revealed a slight infiltration in the ears in the elicitation groups exposed to contact allergens. CONCLUSION: This study showed that repeated topical application on the ears with a contact allergen could prevent the development of diabetes in non-obese diabetic mice. The contact allergens gave a non-visible, subclinical dermatitis on the application site. Activation of NKT cells to the ear lymph nodes seems to be involved.

U2 - 10.1002/dmrr.1280

DO - 10.1002/dmrr.1280

M3 - Journal article

VL - 27

SP - 954

EP - 958

JO - Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews

JF - Diabetes/Metabolism Research and Reviews

SN - 1520-7552

Y2 - 31 October 2010

ER -

ID: 35335564