In human type 1 diabetes and animal models of the disease, a diverse assortment of immune cells infiltrates the pancreatic islets. CD8+ T cells are well represented within infiltrates and HLA multimer staining of pancreas sections provides clear evidence that islet epitope reactive T cells are present within autoimmune lesions. These bona fide effectors have been a key research focus because these cells represent an intellectually attractive culprit for β cell destruction. However, T cell receptors are highly diverse in human insulitis. This suggests correspondingly broad antigen specificity, which includes a majority of T cells for which there is no evidence of islet-specific reactivity. The presence of "non-cognate" T cells in insulitis r...
The control of lymphocyte recruitment to the site of inflammation is an important component determin...
It has been widely hypothesized that pancreatic islet infiltrates include both islet-antigen-specifi...
This article contains Supplementary Data online at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org/lookup/suppl...
In human type 1 diabetes and animal models of the disease, a diverse assortment of immune cells infi...
In human type 1 diabetes and animal models of the disease, a diverse assortment of immune cells infi...
Available evidence provides arguments both for and against a primary pathogenic role for T cells in ...
A direct association of islet-autoreactive T cells with β cell destruction in human pancreatic islet...
A direct association of islet-autoreactive T cells with β cell destruction in human pancreatic islet...
Histopathological studies on pancreas tissues from individuals with recent-onset type 1 diabetes (T1...
Preproinsulin (PPI) is presumably a crucial islet autoantigen found in patients with type 1 diabetes...
T he hallmark of type 1 diabetes is the spe-cific destruction of pancreatic beta cells.This common d...
The immunopathology of type 1 diabetes (T1D) has proved difficult to study in man because of the lim...
It is increasingly appreciated that the pathogenic mechanisms of type 1 diabetes involve both the au...
Type 1 diabetes results from a T cell-mediated destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic beta cell...
Type 1 diabetes results from a T cell-mediated destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic beta cell...
The control of lymphocyte recruitment to the site of inflammation is an important component determin...
It has been widely hypothesized that pancreatic islet infiltrates include both islet-antigen-specifi...
This article contains Supplementary Data online at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org/lookup/suppl...
In human type 1 diabetes and animal models of the disease, a diverse assortment of immune cells infi...
In human type 1 diabetes and animal models of the disease, a diverse assortment of immune cells infi...
Available evidence provides arguments both for and against a primary pathogenic role for T cells in ...
A direct association of islet-autoreactive T cells with β cell destruction in human pancreatic islet...
A direct association of islet-autoreactive T cells with β cell destruction in human pancreatic islet...
Histopathological studies on pancreas tissues from individuals with recent-onset type 1 diabetes (T1...
Preproinsulin (PPI) is presumably a crucial islet autoantigen found in patients with type 1 diabetes...
T he hallmark of type 1 diabetes is the spe-cific destruction of pancreatic beta cells.This common d...
The immunopathology of type 1 diabetes (T1D) has proved difficult to study in man because of the lim...
It is increasingly appreciated that the pathogenic mechanisms of type 1 diabetes involve both the au...
Type 1 diabetes results from a T cell-mediated destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic beta cell...
Type 1 diabetes results from a T cell-mediated destruction of insulin-producing pancreatic beta cell...
The control of lymphocyte recruitment to the site of inflammation is an important component determin...
It has been widely hypothesized that pancreatic islet infiltrates include both islet-antigen-specifi...
This article contains Supplementary Data online at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org/lookup/suppl...