Fas and Fas ligand expression in inflamed islets in pancreas sections of patients with recent-onset Type I diabetes mellitus

被引:0
作者
M. Moriwaki
N. Itoh
J. Miyagawa
K. Yamamoto
A. Imagawa
K. Yamagata
H. Iwahashi
H. Nakajima
M. Namba
S. Nagata
T. Hanafusa
Y. Matsuzawa
机构
[1] Department of Internal Medicine and Molecular Science,
[2] Graduate School of Medicine,undefined
[3] Osaka University,undefined
[4] Osaka,undefined
[5] Japan,undefined
[6] Department of Genetics,undefined
[7] Graduate School of Medicine,undefined
[8] Osaka University,undefined
[9] Osaka,undefined
[10] Japan,undefined
来源
Diabetologia | 1999年 / 42卷
关键词
Keywords Type I diabetes; Fas; Fas ligand; insulitis; human pancreas; apoptosis.;
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摘要
Aims/hypothesis. Type I (insulin-dependent) diabetes results mainly from T-cell-mediated autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta cells. Cytotoxic T lymphocytes destroy target cells via a perforin-based or Fas-based mechanism. Our previous study indicated that the Fas-Fas ligand (FasL) pathway is required for the development of autoimmune diabetes in the NOD mouse. We now investigated whether or not the Fas-FasL system is involved in the beta-cell destruction in human Type I diabetes. Methods. We immunohistochemically analysed pancreas biopsy specimens of 13 recent-onset patients. Results. Pancreatic islets were identified but showed various degrees of reduction in beta-cell volume in all patients. Out of 13 patients 6 had insulitis. In these 6 patients Fas was expressed in both the islets and infiltrating cells but not in either cell type in the 7 other patients without insulitis. Double immunostaining showed that Fas was positive in 92.2 to 97.7 % of beta cells but only in 17.6 to 46.7 % of alpha cells in Fas-positive, insulin-remaining islets. We found FasL was expressed exclusively in islet-infiltrating cells in patients with insulitis. Double immunostaining revealed that the most prevalent phenotype of FasL-positive cells was CD8, which was followed by macrophages and CD4. Conclusion/interpretation. The interaction between Fas on beta cells and FasL on infiltrating cells might trigger selective apoptotic beta-cell death in inflamed islets, leading to immune-mediated Type I diabetes. [Diabetologia (1999) 42: 1332–1340]
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页码:1332 / 1340
页数:8
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