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Alberto Pugliese, Douglas Brown, David Garza, Djanira Murchison, Markus Zeller, Maria Redondo, Juan Diez, George S. Eisenbarth, Dhavalkumar D. Patel, Camillo Ricordi
Published in Volume 107, Issue 5
J Clin Invest. 2001; 107(5):555–564 doi:10.1172/JCI10860
Abstract | Full text | PDF
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Figure 3

Self-antigen–expressing cells in peripheral lymphoid organs. Top panel: expression of insulin mRNA in peripheral lymphoid organs by RT-PCR. From left to right: no template reaction (lane 1), thymus 1278 (lane 2, positive control), spleen 1819 (lane 3), lymph node 2040 (lane 4), lymph node 1001 (lane 5), lymph node 1225 (lane 6), spleen 2073 (lane 7), and spleen 2053 (lane 8). The intensity of β-actin bands differs among samples, suggesting that significant RNA degradation had occurred for some specimens, a phenomenon that cannot always be prevented using human tissues. Bottom panel: immunostaining of spleen (left column) and lymph node (right column) sections using the streptavidin-biotin-peroxidase method and the AEC substrate (red), counterstained with hematoxylin. Sections are stained for proinsulin, GAD65/67, or IA-2, top to bottom. (a) Proinsulin staining, case 1176, 29-year-old. ×24. Note the distribution of proinsulin-positive cells around the white pulp. (b) Proinsulin staining, case 1106, 63-year-old. ×150. (c) GAD65/67 staining, case 2040, 40-week-old fetus. ×250. (d) GAD65/67 staining, case 2040, 40-week-old fetus. ×100. (e) IA-2 staining, case 2053, 39-week-old fetus. ×100. (f) IA-2 staining, case 2053, 39-week-old fetus. ×150.