Abstract :
[en] The precise role of viral infections in the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes is still the subject of an important discussion. Coxsackievirus B4 (CVB4) is the virus the most implicated by a series of epidemiological studies. Pathogenic mechanisms underlying such a relationship implicate a molecular mimicry between CVB4 sequences and beta-cell autoantigens, but mainly a persistent CVB4 infection of pancreatic beta cells followed by a release of sequestered beta antigens and a "bystander" activation of autoreactive T cells. The demonstration of intrathymic expression of antigens specific of peripheral tissues has opened a novel research perspective. We have shown that CVB4 is able to infect in a persistent and producive manner human thymic epithelial cell cultures and human fetal thymic lobes in organotypic cultures. This infection induces an important thymic dysfunction characterized by a severe depletion of thymocytes (thymic T cells) and an up-regulated expression by thymic epithelial and T cells of class I proteins encoded by the major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I). Such thymic dysfunction might be responsible for a decrease of beta-cell central self-tolerance and anti-CVB4 cytotoxic CD8 T-cell activity. CVB4-induced thymic dysfunction would contribute in close association with the peripheral "bystander" effect to the destruction of insulin-secreting islet beta cells and to the development of type 1 diabetes.
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