Abstract

Mycobacterium are among the oldest co-evolutionary partners of humans. The attenuated Mycobacterium bovis Bacillus Calmette Guérin (BCG) strain has been administered globally for 100 years as a vaccine against tuberculosis. BCG also shows promise as treatment for numerous inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. Here, we report on a randomized 8-year long prospective examination of type 1 diabetic subjects with long-term disease who received two doses of the BCG vaccine. After year 3, BCG lowered hemoglobin A1c to near normal levels for the next 5 years. The BCG impact on blood sugars appeared to be driven by a novel systemic and blood sugar lowering mechanism in diabetes. We observe a systemic shift in glucose metabolism from oxidative phosphorylation to aerobic glycolysis, a state of high glucose utilization. Confirmation is gained by metabolomics, mRNAseq, and functional assays of cellular glucose uptake after BCG vaccinations. To prove BCG could induce a systemic change to promote accelerated glucose utilization and impact blood sugars, murine data demonstrated reduced blood sugars and aerobic induction in non-autoimmune mice made chemically diabetic. BCG via epigenetics also resets six central T-regulatory genes for genetic re-programming of tolerance. These findings set the stage for further testing of a known safe vaccine therapy for improved blood sugar control through changes in metabolism and durability with epigenetic changes even in advanced Type 1 diabetes.

Diabetes: Repurposing a classic tuberculosis vaccine

In patients with long-term type 1 diabetes, the tuberculosis vaccine BCG lowers blood sugar levels to near-normal after three years. Denise Faustman and her team from Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School investigated a cohort of type 1 diabetics that received two doses of BCG before being monitored over eight years. After three years, vaccine-treated patients lowered their HbA1c levels—a diabetes biomarker reflecting average blood sugar over 8–12 weeks—by over 10%. This reduction increased to 18% in the fourth year, after which HbA1c levels remained low up to the final year of monitoring. The researchers report that the BCG vaccine appeared to reset diabetes-implicated parts of the immune system and, through a novel mechanism, shift glucose metabolism to lower blood sugar to healthy levels. Future studies will further classify BCG’s benefits in diabetes.

Details

Title
Long-term reduction in hyperglycemia in advanced type 1 diabetes: the value of induced aerobic glycolysis with BCG vaccinations
Author
Kühtreiber, Willem M 1 ; Tran, Lisa 1 ; Kim, Taesoo 1 ; Dybala, Michael 1 ; Nguyen, Brian 1 ; Plager, Sara 1 ; Huang, Daniel 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Janes, Sophie 1 ; Defusco Audrey 1 ; Baum, Danielle 1 ; Zheng, Hui 2 ; Faustman, Denise L 1 

 Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Immunobiology Laboratories, Boston, USA (GRID:grid.32224.35) (ISNI:0000 0004 0386 9924) 
 Massachusetts General Hospital, Department of Biostatistics, Boston, USA (GRID:grid.32224.35) (ISNI:0000 0004 0386 9924) 
Publication year
2018
Publication date
2018
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
e-ISSN
20590105
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2389668174
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2018. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.