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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
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Figure 6

Self-antigen–expressing cells and apoptosis. Frozen sections were subject to TUNEL and proinsulin staining. (a and b) Thymus (case 1829), proinsulin (TRITC) and TUNEL (FITC) staining. ∼×320. A proinsulin-positive cell (orange fluorescence) is seen in the center of a rosette (a) surrounded by apoptotic cells (green fluorescence) or in close contact with an apoptotic cell (b). (c and d) Spleen (case 1089), proinsulin (alkaline phosphatase-AP Orange) and TUNEL staining (peroxidase-AEC). ∼×320. A large, pyramidal proinsulin-positive cell (orange) is shown in the center of a rosette surrounded by at least five cells, three of which appear TUNEL-positive (red) (c); a proinsulin-positive cell (orange) is shown in close contact with two TUNEL-positive cells (red) (d).