Abstract:
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The Environmental Determinants of Diabetes in the Young (TEDDY) study enrolled 8,676 newborns by screening of HLA-DR-DQ haplogenotypes at six clinical centers in four countries, and collected longitudinal plasma samples following birth for mass spectrometry metabolomics analysis and ascorbic acid, 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) measurement under a nested case-control design. We clustered temporal plasma lipidomes of n=165 cases by applying the Gaussian mixture model and identified a subgroup of children developing autoimmunity at an earlier age compared to the others, similar to the age of population-wide early incidence. Differential analysis showed that children having early onset of autoimmunity had reduced plasma ascorbic acid, cholesterol and sphingomyelins at infant age, while plasma 25(OH)D, diglycerides, lysophosphatidylcholines, triglycerides, and alanine prior to the onset of autoimmunity was associated with progression to T1D. Plasma ascorbic acid and 25(OH)D at infancy were found associated with HLA-DR3/DR4 haplogenotype among cases but not in matched controls, implying gene expression dysregulation of circulating vitamins as latent signals.
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