AI Article Synopsis

  • Omics technologies have generated a vast amount of data, enhancing our understanding of type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) and highlighting challenges in moving toward personalized treatment approaches.
  • Key issues identified include the clinical and genetic variability of T1DM, the importance of DNA markers, and differences in risk among various ethnic populations.
  • This review focuses on organizing modern research findings in molecular genetics and epigenetics related to T1DM, including the role of risk haplotypes, DNA methylation, and microRNAs, aiming to improve early diagnosis and treatment strategies.

Article Abstract

Omics technologies accumulated an enormous amount of data that advanced knowledge about the molecular pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes mellitus and identified a number of fundamental problems focused on the transition to personalized diabetology in the future. Among them, the most significant are the following: (1) clinical and genetic heterogeneity of type 1 diabetes mellitus; (2) the prognostic significance of DNA markers beyond the genes; (3) assessment of the contribution of a large number of DNA markers to the polygenic risk of disease progress; (4) the existence of ethnic population differences in the distribution of frequencies of risk alleles and genotypes; (5) the infancy of epigenetic research into type 1 diabetes mellitus. Disclosure of these issues is one of the priorities of fundamental diabetology and practical healthcare. The purpose of this review is the systemization of the results of modern molecular genetic, transcriptomic, and epigenetic investigations of type 1 diabetes mellitus in general, as well as its individual forms. The paper summarizes data on the role of risk haplotypes and a number of other candidate genes and loci, identified through genome-wide association studies, in the development of this disease and in alterations in T cell signaling. In addition, this review assesses the contribution of differential DNA methylation and the role of microRNAs in the formation of the molecular pathogenesis of type 1 diabetes mellitus, as well as discusses the most currently central trends in the context of early diagnosis of type 1 diabetes mellitus.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10886892PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12020399DOI Listing

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