Type II (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus is associated with increased blood concentrations of markers of the acute-phase
response, including sialic acid, α-1 acid glycoprotein, serum amyloid A, C-reactive protein and cortisol, and the main cytokine
mediator of the response, interleukin-6. The dyslipidaemia common in Type II diabetes (hypertriglyceridaemia and low serum
levels of HDL cholesterol) is also a feature of natural and experimental acute-phase reactions. We review evidence that a
long-term cytokine-mediated acute-phase reaction occurs in Type II diabetes and is part of a wide-ranging innate immune response.
Through the action of cytokines on the brain, liver, endothelium, adipose tissue and elsewhere, this process could be a major
contributor to the biochemical and clinical features of metabolic syndrome X (glucose intolerance, dyslipidaemia, insulin
resistance, hypertension, central obesity, accelerated atherosclerosis) but also provides a mechanism for many other abnormalities
seen in Type II diabetes, including those in blood clotting, the reproductive system, metal ion metabolism, psychological
behaviour and capillary permeability. In the short-term, the innate immune system restores homeostasis after environmental
threats; we suggest that in Type II diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance long-term lifestyle and environmental stimulants,
probably in those with an innately hypersensitive acute-phase response, produce disease instead of repair. [Diabetologia (1998)
41: 1241–1248]
Keywords Innate immune system - acute-phase response - cytokines - interleukins