Publication | Open Access
Intravital imaging of CTLs killing islet cells in diabetic mice
82
Citations
50
References
2011
Year
EngineeringImmunologyCellular PhysiologyInsulin SignalingCell InteractionConfined Motility PatternCell SignalingMolecular ImagingIslet CellsNovel Imaging MethodMolecular SignalingRandom Motility PatternMolecular PhysiologyPancreatic IsletsIn Vivo SystemCell TraffickingBiomedical AnalysisBiophotonicsCell BiologyIslet TransplantationSignal TransductionDiabetesCellular BiochemistryMedicine
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is caused by autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing β cells in the pancreatic islets, which are essentially mini-organs embedded in exocrine tissue. CTLs are considered to have a predominant role in the autoimmune destruction underlying T1D. Visualization of CTL-mediated killing of β cells would provide new insight into the pathogenesis of T1D, but has been technically challenging to achieve. Here, we report our use of intravital 2-photon imaging in mice to visualize the dynamic behavior of a virally expanded, diabetogenic CTL population in the pancreas at cellular resolution. Following vascular arrest and extravasation, CTLs adopted a random motility pattern throughout the compact exocrine tissue and displayed unimpeded yet nonlinear migration between anatomically nearby islets. Upon antigen encounter within islets, a confined motility pattern was acquired that allowed the CTLs to scan the target cell surface. A minority of infiltrating CTLs subsequently arrested at the β cell junction, while duration of stable CTL-target cell contact was on the order of hours. Slow-rate killing occurred in the sustained local presence of substantial numbers of effector cells. Collectively, these data portray the kinetics of CTL homing to and between antigenic target sites as a stochastic process at the sub-organ level and argue against a dominant influence of chemotactic gradients.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1