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Dive into the research topics where Peter A. Gottlieb is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter A. Gottlieb.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2006

CD127 expression inversely correlates with FoxP3 and suppressive function of human CD4+ T reg cells

Weihong Liu; Amy L. Putnam; Zhou Xu-yu; Gregory L. Szot; Michael R. Lee; Shirley Zhu; Peter A. Gottlieb; Philipp Kapranov; Thomas R. Gingeras; Barbara Fazekas de St Groth; Carol Clayberger; David M. Soper; Steven F. Ziegler; Jeffrey A. Bluestone

Regulatory T (T reg) cells are critical regulators of immune tolerance. Most T reg cells are defined based on expression of CD4, CD25, and the transcription factor, FoxP3. However, these markers have proven problematic for uniquely defining this specialized T cell subset in humans. We found that the IL-7 receptor (CD127) is down-regulated on a subset of CD4+ T cells in peripheral blood. We demonstrate that the majority of these cells are FoxP3+, including those that express low levels or no CD25. A combination of CD4, CD25, and CD127 resulted in a highly purified population of T reg cells accounting for significantly more cells that previously identified based on other cell surface markers. These cells were highly suppressive in functional suppressor assays. In fact, cells separated based solely on CD4 and CD127 expression were anergic and, although representing at least three times the number of cells (including both CD25+CD4+ and CD25−CD4+ T cell subsets), were as suppressive as the “classic” CD4+CD25hi T reg cell subset. Finally, we show that CD127 can be used to quantitate T reg cell subsets in individuals with type 1 diabetes supporting the use of CD127 as a biomarker for human T reg cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

The cation efflux transporter ZnT8 (Slc30A8) is a major autoantigen in human type 1 diabetes

Janet M. Wenzlau; Kirstine Juhl; Liping Yu; Ong Moua; Suparna A. Sarkar; Peter A. Gottlieb; Marian Rewers; George S. Eisenbarth; Jan Jensen; Howard W. Davidson; John C. Hutton

Type 1 diabetes (T1D) results from progressive loss of pancreatic islet mass through autoimmunity targeted at a diverse, yet limited, series of molecules that are expressed in the pancreatic β cell. Identification of these molecular targets provides insight into the pathogenic process, diagnostic assays, and potential therapeutic agents. Autoantigen candidates were identified from microarray expression profiling of human and rodent pancreas and islet cells and screened with radioimmunoprecipitation assays using new-onset T1D and prediabetic sera. A high-ranking candidate, the zinc transporter ZnT8 (Slc30A8), was targeted by autoantibodies in 60–80% of new-onset T1D compared with <2% of controls and <3% type 2 diabetic and in up to 30% of patients with other autoimmune disorders with a T1D association. ZnT8 antibodies (ZnTA) were found in 26% of T1D subjects classified as autoantibody-negative on the basis of existing markers [glutamate decarboxylase (GADA), protein tyrosine phosphatase IA2 (IA2A), antibodies to insulin (IAA), and islet cytoplasmic autoantibodies (ICA)]. Individuals followed from birth to T1D showed ZnT8A as early as 2 years of age and increasing levels and prevalence persisting to disease onset. ZnT8A generally emerged later than GADA and IAA in prediabetes, although not in a strict order. The combined measurement of ZnT8A, GADA, IA2A, and IAA raised autoimmunity detection rates to 98% at disease onset, a level that approaches that needed to detect prediabetes in a general pediatric population. The combination of bioinformatics and molecular engineering used here will potentially generate other diabetes autoimmunity markers and is also broadly applicable to other autoimmune disorders.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2009

Rituximab, B-Lymphocyte Depletion, and Preservation of Beta-Cell Function

Mark D. Pescovitz; Carla J. Greenbaum; Heidi Krause-Steinrauf; Dorothy J. Becker; Stephen E. Gitelman; Robin Goland; Peter A. Gottlieb; Jennifer B. Marks; Paula McGee; Antoinette Moran; Philip Raskin; Henry Rodriguez; Desmond A. Schatz; Diane K. Wherrett; Darrell M. Wilson; John M. Lachin; Jay S. Skyler

BACKGROUND The immunopathogenesis of type 1 diabetes mellitus is associated with T-lymphocyte autoimmunity. However, there is growing evidence that B lymphocytes play a role in many T-lymphocyte-mediated diseases. It is possible to achieve selective depletion of B lymphocytes with rituximab, an anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody. This phase 2 study evaluated the role of B-lymphocyte depletion in patients with type 1 diabetes. METHODS We conducted a randomized, double-blind study in which 87 patients between 8 and 40 years of age who had newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes were assigned to receive infusions of rituximab or placebo on days 1, 8, 15, and 22 of the study. The primary outcome, assessed 1 year after the first infusion, was the geometric mean area under the curve (AUC) for the serum C-peptide level during the first 2 hours of a mixed-meal tolerance test. Secondary outcomes included safety and changes in the glycated hemoglobin level and insulin dose. RESULTS At 1 year, the mean AUC for the level of C peptide was significantly higher in the rituximab group than in the placebo group. The rituximab group also had significantly lower levels of glycated hemoglobin and required less insulin. Between 3 months and 12 months, the rate of decline in C-peptide levels in the rituximab group was significantly less than that in the placebo group. CD19+ B lymphocytes were depleted in patients in the rituximab group, but levels increased to 69% of baseline values at 12 months. More patients in the rituximab group than in the placebo group had adverse events, mostly grade 1 or grade 2, after the first infusion. The reactions appeared to be minimal with subsequent infusions. There was no increase in infections or neutropenia with rituximab. CONCLUSIONS A four-dose course of rituximab partially preserved beta-cell function over a period of 1 year in patients with type 1 diabetes. The finding that B lymphocytes contribute to the pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes may open a new pathway for exploration in the treatment of patients with this condition. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00279305.)


The Lancet | 2011

Antigen-based therapy with glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) vaccine in patients with recent-onset type 1 diabetes: a randomised double-blind trial

Diane K. Wherrett; Brian N. Bundy; Dorothy J. Becker; Linda A. DiMeglio; Stephen E. Gitelman; Robin Goland; Peter A. Gottlieb; Carla J. Greenbaum; Kevan C. Herold; Jennifer B. Marks; Roshanak Monzavi; Antoinette Moran; Tihamer Orban; Jerry P. Palmer; Philip Raskin; Henry Rodriguez; Desmond A. Schatz; Darrell M. Wilson; Jeffrey P. Krischer; Jay S. Skyler

BACKGROUND Glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) is a major target of the autoimmune response that occurs in type 1 diabetes mellitus. In animal models of autoimmunity, treatment with a target antigen can modulate aggressive autoimmunity. We aimed to assess whether immunisation with GAD formulated with aluminum hydroxide (GAD-alum) would preserve insulin production in recent-onset type 1 diabetes. METHODS Patients aged 3-45 years who had been diagnosed with type 1 diabetes for less than 100 days were enrolled from 15 sites in the USA and Canada, and randomly assigned to receive one of three treatments: three injections of 20 μg GAD-alum, two injections of 20 μg GAD-alum and one of alum, or 3 injections of alum. Injections were given subcutaneously at baseline, 4 weeks later, and 8 weeks after the second injection. The randomisation sequence was computer generated at the TrialNet coordinating centre. Patients and study personnel were masked to treatment assignment. The primary outcome was the baseline-adjusted geometric mean area under the curve (AUC) of serum C-peptide during the first 2 h of a 4-h mixed meal tolerance test at 1 year. Secondary outcomes included changes in glycated haemoglobin A(1c) (HbA(1c)) and insulin dose, and safety. Analysis included all randomised patients with known measurements. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00529399. FINDINGS 145 patients were enrolled and treated with GAD-alum (n=48), GAD-alum plus alum (n=49), or alum (n=48). At 1 year, the 2-h AUC of C-peptide, adjusted for age, sex, and baseline C-peptide value, was 0·412 nmol/L (95% CI 0·349-0·478) in the GAD-alum group, 0·382 nmol/L (0·322-0·446) in the GAD-alum plus alum group, and 0·413 nmol/L (0·351-0·477) in the alum group. The ratio of the population mean of the adjusted geometric mean 2-h AUC of C-peptide was 0·998 (95% CI 0·779-1·22; p=0·98) for GAD-alum versus alum, and 0·926 (0·720-1·13; p=0·50) for GAD-alum plus alum versus alum. HbA(1c), insulin use, and the occurrence and severity of adverse events did not differ between groups. INTERPRETATION Antigen-based immunotherapy therapy with two or three doses of subcutaneous GAD-alum across 4-12 weeks does not alter the course of loss of insulin secretion during 1 year in patients with recently diagnosed type 1 diabetes. Although antigen-based therapy is a highly desirable treatment and is effective in animal models, translation to human autoimmune disease remains a challenge. FUNDING US National Institutes of Health.


Clinical Immunology | 2009

Treatment of patients with new onset Type 1 diabetes with a single course of anti-CD3 mAb teplizumab preserves insulin production for up to 5 years

Kevan C. Herold; Stephen E. Gitelman; Carla J. Greenbaum; Jennifer M. Puck; William Hagopian; Peter A. Gottlieb; Peter Sayre; Peter Bianchine; Emelita Wong; Vicki Seyfert-Margolis; Kasia Bourcier; Jeffrey A. Bluestone

Anti-CD3 mAbs may prolong beta cell function up to 2 years in patients with new onset Type 1 diabetes (T1DM). A randomized open label trial of anti-CD3 mAb, Teplizumab, in T1DM was stopped after 10 subjects because of increased adverse events than in a previous trial related with higher dosing of drug. Teplizumab caused transient reduction in circulating T cells, but the recovered cells were not new thymic emigrants because T cell receptor excision circles were not increased. There was a trend for reduced loss of C-peptide over 2 years with drug treatment (p=0.1), and insulin use was lower (p<0.001). In 4 drug-treated subjects followed up to 60 months, C-peptide responses were maintained. We conclude that increased doses of Teplizumab are associated with greater adverse events without improved efficacy. The drug may marginate rather than deplete T cells. C-peptide levels may remain detectable up to 5 years after treatment.


Diabetes | 2012

Fall in C-Peptide During First 2 Years From Diagnosis: Evidence of at Least Two Distinct Phases From Composite Type 1 Diabetes TrialNet Data

Carla J. Greenbaum; Craig A. Beam; David Boulware; Stephen E. Gitelman; Peter A. Gottlieb; Kevan C. Herold; John M. Lachin; P. McGee; Jerry P. Palmer; Mark D. Pescovitz; Heidi Krause-Steinrauf; Jay S. Skyler; Jay M. Sosenko

Interpretation of clinical trials to alter the decline in β-cell function after diagnosis of type 1 diabetes depends on a robust understanding of the natural history of disease. Combining data from the Type 1 Diabetes TrialNet studies, we describe the natural history of β-cell function from shortly after diagnosis through 2 years post study randomization, assess the degree of variability between patients, and investigate factors that may be related to C-peptide preservation or loss. We found that 93% of individuals have detectable C-peptide 2 years from diagnosis. In 11% of subjects, there was no significant fall from baseline by 2 years. There was a biphasic decline in C-peptide; the C-peptide slope was −0.0245 pmol/mL/month (95% CI −0.0271 to −0.0215) through the first 12 months and −0.0079 (−0.0113 to −0.0050) from 12 to 24 months (P < 0.001). This pattern of fall in C-peptide over time has implications for understanding trial results in which effects of therapy are most pronounced early and raises the possibility that there are time-dependent differences in pathophysiology. The robust data on the C-peptide obtained under clinical trial conditions should be used in planning and interpretation of clinical trials.


Diabetes | 2013

Teplizumab (anti-CD3 mAb) treatment preserves C-peptide responses in patients with new-onset type 1 diabetes in a randomized controlled trial: Metabolic and immunologic features at baseline identify a subgroup of responders

Kevan C. Herold; Stephen E. Gitelman; Mario R. Ehlers; Peter A. Gottlieb; Carla J. Greenbaum; William Hagopian; Karen D. Boyle; Lynette Keyes-Elstein; Sudeepta Aggarwal; Deborah Phippard; Peter Sayre; James McNamara; Jeffrey A. Bluestone

Trials of immune therapies in new-onset type 1 diabetes (T1D) have shown success, but not all subjects respond, and the duration of response is limited. Our aim was to determine whether two courses of teplizumab, an Fc receptor–nonbinding anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody, reduces the decline in C-peptide levels in patients with T1D 2 years after disease onset. We also set out to identify characteristics of responders. We treated 52 subjects with new-onset T1D with teplizumab for 2 weeks at diagnosis and after 1 year in an open-label, randomized, controlled trial. In the intent to treat analysis of the primary end point, patients treated with teplizumab had a reduced decline in C-peptide at 2 years (mean −0.28 nmol/L [95% CI −0.36 to −0.20]) versus control (mean −0.46 nmol/L [95% CI −0.57 to −0.35]; P = 0.002), a 75% improvement. The most common adverse events were rash, transient upper respiratory infections, headache, and nausea. In a post hoc analysis we characterized clinical responders and found that metabolic (HbA1c and insulin use) and immunologic features distinguished this group from those who did not respond to teplizumab. We conclude that teplizumab treatment preserves insulin production and reduces the use of exogenous insulin in some patients with new-onset T1D. Metabolic and immunologic features at baseline can identify a subgroup with robust responses to immune therapy.


Diabetes Care | 2015

Staging Presymptomatic Type 1 Diabetes: A Scientific Statement of JDRF, the Endocrine Society, and the American Diabetes Association

Richard Insel; Jessica L. Dunne; Mark A. Atkinson; Jane L. Chiang; Dana Dabelea; Peter A. Gottlieb; Carla J. Greenbaum; Kevan C. Herold; Jeffrey P. Krischer; Åke Lernmark; Robert E. Ratner; Marian Rewers; Desmond A. Schatz; Jay S. Skyler; Jay M. Sosenko; Anette G. Ziegler

Insights from prospective, longitudinal studies of individuals at risk for developing type 1 diabetes have demonstrated that the disease is a continuum that progresses sequentially at variable but predictable rates through distinct identifiable stages prior to the onset of symptoms. Stage 1 is defined as the presence of β-cell autoimmunity as evidenced by the presence of two or more islet autoantibodies with normoglycemia and is presymptomatic, stage 2 as the presence of β-cell autoimmunity with dysglycemia and is presymptomatic, and stage 3 as onset of symptomatic disease. Adoption of this staging classification provides a standardized taxonomy for type 1 diabetes and will aid the development of therapies and the design of clinical trials to prevent symptomatic disease, promote precision medicine, and provide a framework for an optimized benefit/risk ratio that will impact regulatory approval, reimbursement, and adoption of interventions in the early stages of type 1 diabetes to prevent symptomatic disease.


Diabetes Care | 2010

Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, and Prognostic Implications of Cystic Fibrosis–Related Diabetes A technical review

Antoinette Moran; Dorothy J. Becker; Samuel J. Casella; Peter A. Gottlieb; M. Sue Kirkman; Bruce C. Marshall; Bonnie Slovis

Cystic fibrosis–related diabetes (CFRD) is the most common comorbidity in subjects with cystic fibrosis (CF). A consensus conference on CFRD was cosponsored by the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation (CFF), the American Diabetes Association (ADA), and the Pediatric Endocrine Society (PES) in September 2009. The committees evidence-based recommendations for clinical management of CFRD are published in this issue of Diabetes Care . This review article describes the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and prognostic implications of CFRD. ### Epidemiology CFRD is part of a continuum of glucose tolerance abnormalities, ranging from normal glucose tolerance (NGT), to impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), to CFRD without fasting hyperglycemia (CFRD FH−), to CFRD with fasting hyperglycemia (CFRD FH+) (Fig. 1). Unlike patients with type 1 diabetes, those with CFRD do not develop complete absence of insulin secretion. At the other end of the spectrum, few CF patients have truly normal glucose metabolism. Approximately 20% of children who are categorized as having NGT based on their fasting and 2-h oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) glucose levels have glucose elevation >200 mg/dl (11.1 mmol/l) mid-OGTT, which is termed indeterminate glycemia (INDET) (1). As in the general population where INDET is a risk factor for progression to diabetes (2), INDET in children with CF is associated with early development of CFRD (1). Home continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) has shown that intermittent, asymptomatic hyperglycemia is common even in CF patients whose OGTT is normal, but the prognostic significance of these early impairments in glucose metabolism is unknown (3,4). Impaired fasting glucose has also been described in CF (5,6). Figure 1 The spectrum of glucose tolerance in CF. Unlike patients with type 1 diabetes, insulin secretion is never completely absent in CFRD. Clinical deterioration (pulmonary function, underweight) is associated with worse glucose tolerance status. Abnl CGM = abnormal home continuous glucose monitoring, T1D …


Nature Reviews Endocrinology | 2010

Autoimmune polyglandular syndromes

Aaron W. Michels; Peter A. Gottlieb

The autoimmune polyglandular syndromes—a group of syndromes comprising a combination of endocrine and nonendocrine autoimmune diseases—differ in their component diseases and in the immunologic features of their pathogenesis. One of the three main syndromes, type 1 autoimmune polyglandular syndrome (APS-1), has a unique pathogenic mechanism owing to mutations in the autoimmune regulator (AIRE) gene, which results in the loss of central tolerance—a process by which developing T cells with potential reactivity for self-antigens are eliminated during early differentiation in the thymus. Patients with IPEX (immune dysfunction, polyendocrinopathy, enteropathy, X-linked) syndrome harbor mutations in the forkhead box P3 (FOXP3) gene in regulatory T cells, which leads to severe autoimmunity and immune deficiency. Although both of these disorders are rare, their well-defined mechanisms of disease provide a basis for the understanding of the more common condition, APS-2. In this syndrome, alleles of human leukocyte antigens (HLAs) determine the targeting of specific tissues by autoreactive T cells, which leads to organ-specific autoimmunity as a result of this loss of tolerance. Non-HLA genes also contribute to autoimmunity in APS-2 and, depending on the polymorphism, potentially predispose to a loss of tolerance or influence which organ is specifically targeted. This Review discusses the genetic basis of APS-1, APS-2 and IPEX syndrome, with an emphasis on the mechanisms of autoimmunity and presents currently available therapies to treat their underlying autoimmune disorders.

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Carla J. Greenbaum

Benaroya Research Institute

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Aaron Michels

University of Colorado Boulder

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Liping Yu

University of Colorado Denver

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Philip Raskin

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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