http://www.newswire.ca/releases/March2001/20/c5212.html
TORONTO, March 20
/CNW/ - A team of researchers led by Hospital for Sick Children (HSC) senior
scientist Michael Dosch has determined that multiple sclerosis and type
I (juvenile) diabetes mellitus are far more closely linked than previously
thought, including the role cow milk protein plays as a risk factor in
the development of both diseases for people who are genetically susceptible.
This research is published in recent issues of The Journal of Immunology
(April 1 and February 15, 2001).
Multiple sclerosis
(MS) and type I diabetes mellitus are autoimmune disorders, where the body's
immune system attacks its own tissue. The diseases are entirely different
clinically, but have nearly identical ethnic and geographic distribution,
genetic similarities, and, as is now known, shared environmental risk factors.
In a collaboration
between The Hospital For Sick Children, St. Michael's Hospital and the
Pittsburgh Children's Hospital, Dr. Dosch's laboratory discovered a high
degree of similarity in the autoimmunity of MS and diabetes patients, and
that a widely used mouse model for diabetes could also develop an MS-like
disease.
"Much to our surprise,
we found that immunologically, type I diabetes and multiple sclerosis are
almost the same - in a test tube you can barely tell the two diseases apart,"
said Dr. Dosch, the study's principal investigator, a senior scientist
in the HSC Research Institute, and a professor of Paediatrics and Immunology
at the University of Toronto (U of T). "We found that the autoimmunity
was not specific to the organ system affected by the disease. Previously
it was thought that in MS autoimmunity would develop in the central nervous
system, and in diabetes it would only be found in the pancreas. We found
that both tissues are targeted in each disease."
In diabetes and
MS, there is a long, drawn-out period of silent disease years before the
appearance of symptoms and diagnosis of the disease. In diabetes, it is
this "pre-diabetes" phase that is targeted by interventions to stop the
development of the full-blown disease. Similar efforts are planned for
individuals at high risk for MS.
"We are planning
a large international study with centres in Canada and the US to test the
possibility of interventions during the pre-MS phase," added Dr. Dosch.
One of the major
environmental risk factors for diabetes is exposure to cow milk protein.
Based on the role of cow milk protein as a risk factor in the development
of type I diabetes, an international global diabetes prevention trial called
TRIGR - Trial to Reduce Insulin-dependent diabetes in the Genetically at
Risk - is expected to begin later this year, with Dr. Dosch as the trial's
basic science chair. In the first step to test just how far the similarities
between MS and diabetes go, the study's researchers looked for signs of
abnormal immunity to cow milk in MS patients. Such abnormalities were indeed
found in most patients, suggesting that similar processes may contribute
to both diseases. If confirmed in a larger and prospective family study,
it may become possible to design dietary means to influence the course
of MS as well as diabetes.
"The similarities
found between MS and type I diabetes will open new avenues of research.
Our next focus will be to study MS family member for signs of early MS,"
said Dr. Paul O'Connor, head of the MS clinic at St. Michael's Hospital,
a co-author of the study and Associate Professor of Neurology at U of T.
Other collaborators
on this research were: Shawn Winer, Igor Astsaturov, Roy K. Cheung, Lakshman
Gunaratnam, Denise D. Wood and Professor Mario Moscarello, all from the
HSC Research Institute; Colin McKerlie, Sunnybrook and Women's Health Sciences
Centre and the University of Toronto; and Professor Dorothy J. Becker,
Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh and the University of Pittsburgh.
Funding for this
research was provided by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the
Juvenile Diabetes Foundation, the Canadian Diabetes Association, the US
National Institutes of Health and the Renziehausen Fund.
For further information:
please contact: Laura Greer, Public Affairs, The Hospital for Sick Children,
(416) 813-5046, laura.greer@sickkids.ca; Tracy MacIsaac, Media Relations,
St. Michael's Hospital, (416) 864-5047, macisaact@smh.toronto.on.ca