The association between autoimmune diseases and type 1 diabetes (T1D) is mostly based on studies among people with T1D at baseline. We assessed the risk of incident T1D among adolescents with other au Show more
The association between autoimmune diseases and type 1 diabetes (T1D) is mostly based on studies among people with T1D at baseline. We assessed the risk of incident T1D among adolescents with other autoimmune diseases. Included were all Israeli adolescents without a history of dysglycemia, aged 16-19 years, undergoing medical evaluation before mandatory military service between January 1996 and December 2016. Data were linked with information on adult-onset T1D from the Israeli National Diabetes Registry. The cohort was dichotomized by the presence of any autoimmune disease. Cox proportional hazards modeling was applied. A total of 1,426,362 people were included, of whom 38,766 (2.7%) had a history of autoimmunity at study entry (10,333 with autoimmune thyroid disease [AITD] and 9,603 with celiac disease). Over 15,810,751 person-years of follow-up, there were 37 and 740 incident cases of T1D among people with and without autoimmunity, respectively, and a crude incident rate of 9.6 and 4.8 cases per 105 person-years, respectively. In a multivariable model adjusted for sex, birth year, and sociodemographic variables, the hazard ratio (HR) for incident T1D among people with autoimmunity was 2.19 (95% CI 1.57-3.04) versus those without. Results persisted when islet autoantibody data were used as mandatory criteria for T1D case definition (HR 2.22, 95% CI 1.13-4.35). The HRs among people with AITD and celiac disease were 3.99 (2.5-6.4) and 2.82 (1.46-5.45), respectively. Autoimmune diseases in late adolescence were associated with an increased risk of T1D in adulthood in both sexes, especially among those with AITD and celiac disease. Show less
The neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses are pediatric neurodegenerative diseases with common clinical features. Of the nine clinical variants (CLN1-CLN9), six have been genetically identified. Most variant Show more
The neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses are pediatric neurodegenerative diseases with common clinical features. Of the nine clinical variants (CLN1-CLN9), six have been genetically identified. Most variants manifest cell death and dysregulated sphingolipid metabolism, suggesting the proteins defective in these disorders may interact along one pathway. NCL patient-derived cell lines exhibit cell growth and apoptotic defects that reverse following transfection with the wild-type gene. The membrane-bound proteins CLN3, CLN6, and CLN8 complement each other, as do CLN1 and CLN2 proteins, with respect to growth and apoptosis. The CLN2 protein also corrects growth and apoptosis in CLN3-, CLN6-, and CLN8-deficient cell lines. Neither CLN1-deficient nor CLN2-deficient growth defects are corrected by CLN3, CLN6, and CLN8 proteins. CLN2, CLN3, CLN6, and CLN8 proteins co-immunoprecipitate and co-localize to early and/or recycling endosomes and lipid rafts. Additionally, CLN2p and CLN1p co-immunoprecipitate. The work presented supports interactions between NCL proteins occurring at multiple points along one pathway. Show less