Tissue-specific expression of Fas-ligand (Fas-L) can provide immune privilege by inducing apoptosis of "invading" lymphocytes expressing Fas. However, accelerated diabetes has been reported in transgenic mice expressing Fas-L in islets (RIP-Fas-L) as a result of Fas-dependent fratricide of beta-cells after transfer of diabetogenic clones. Here we studied whether Fas-L could protect islets from autoaggressive CD8 lymphocytes in a transgenic model of virally induced diabetes (RIP-LCMV-NP transgenic mice), in which the autoaggressive response is directed to a viral nucleoprotein (NP) expressed as a transgene in beta-cells. Indeed, disease incidence after viral (lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus [LCMV]) infection was reduced by similar to30%, which was associated with a decrease of autoaggressive CD8 NP-specific lymphocytes in islets and pancreatic draining lymph nodes. However, surprisingly, a high degree (50%) of diabetes was seen in mice that expressed only Fas-L but not the viral transgene (NP) in beta-cells after infection with LCMV. This was due to induction of Fas on R-cells after LCMV infection of the pancreas, resulting in Fas/Fas-L-mediated fratricide. Thus, although Fas-L can lend some immune privilege to islet cells, local virus-induced inflammation will induce Fas on beta-cells, leading to their mutual destruction if Fas-L is present. Expression of Fas-L therefore might, not be protective in situations in which viral inflammation can be expected, resulting in Fas induction on the targeted cell itself.