Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 1990; 95(1): 4-10
DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1210928
Original

© J. A. Barth Verlag in Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Increased Cell-Mediated Cytotoxicity against Beta-Cells in Streptozotocin-Treated Offspring of Mother Animals with Gestational Hyperglycaemia *)

G. Dörner, Erika Köhler1 , J. Friedrichs, Franziska Götz, W. Rohde, Ursula Kürschner
  • Institute of Experimental Endocrinology, Humboldt University Medical School (Charité), Berlin, GDR
  • 1Central Institute of Diabetes “Gerhardt Katsch” Karlsburg/GDR
*) Dedicated to Professor Dr. H. Bibergeil on the occasion of his 65th birthday
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1989

Publikationsdatum:
16. Juli 2009 (online)

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Summary

The offspring of mother animals with mild gestational hyperglycaemia exhibited basal hyperinsulinism, decreased glucose tolerance and increased susceptibility to streptozotocin diabetes. Following low-dose successive streptozotocin treatment a significantly increased spleen cell cytotoxicity against-cells was found in these animals as compared to the offspring of gestational normoglycaemic control mothers. Such increased cell-mediated cytotoxicity, considered as enhanced autoimmune reactivity, was positively correlated to blood glucose levels and negatively correlated to pancreatic insulin contents. Thus, hyperinsulinism, occurring during pre- and neonatal brain organization and produced by gestational hyperglycaemia, is a predisposing teratogenetic risk factor not only for the development of type II, but also of type I diabetes. Thus, it is comprehensible that the prevalence of type I diabetes in children could be decisively reduced by preventing gestational hyperglycaemia in their mothers (Dörner et al., 1985)