Expanded T cells from pancreatic lymph nodes of type 1 diabetic subjects recognize an insulin epitope
- PMID: 15889096
- DOI: 10.1038/nature03625
Expanded T cells from pancreatic lymph nodes of type 1 diabetic subjects recognize an insulin epitope
Abstract
In autoimmune type 1 diabetes, pathogenic T lymphocytes are associated with the specific destruction of insulin-producing beta-islet cells. Identification of the autoantigens involved in triggering this process is a central question. Here we examined T cells from pancreatic draining lymph nodes, the site of islet-cell-specific self-antigen presentation. We cloned single T cells in a non-biased manner from pancreatic draining lymph nodes of subjects with type 1 diabetes and from non-diabetic controls. A high degree of T-cell clonal expansion was observed in pancreatic lymph nodes from long-term diabetic patients but not from control subjects. The oligoclonally expanded T cells from diabetic subjects with DR4, a susceptibility allele for type 1 diabetes, recognized the insulin A 1-15 epitope restricted by DR4. These results identify insulin-reactive, clonally expanded T cells from the site of autoinflammatory drainage in long-term type 1 diabetics, indicating that insulin may indeed be the target antigen causing autoimmune diabetes.
Comment in
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Immunology: insulin trigger for diabetes.Nature. 2005 May 12;435(7039):151-2. doi: 10.1038/435151a. Nature. 2005. PMID: 15889071 No abstract available.
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Immunology: Insulin auto-antigenicity in type 1 diabetes.Nature. 2005 Nov 24;438(7067):E5; discussion E5-6. doi: 10.1038/nature04423. Nature. 2005. PMID: 16306940
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