Autoimmune β-cell destruction leads to type 1 diabetes, but the pathophysiological mechanisms remain unclear. To help address this void, we created an open-access online repository, unprecedented in its size, composed of large-scale electron microscopy images (‘nanotomy’) of human pancreas tissue obtained from the Network for Pancreatic Organ donors with Diabetes (nPOD; www.nanotomy.org). Nanotomy allows analyses of complete donor islets with up to macromolecular resolution. Anomalies we found in type 1 diabetes included (i) an increase of ‘intermediate cells’ containing granules resembling those of exocrine zymogen and endocrine hormone secreting cells; and (ii) elevated presence of innate immune cells. These are our first results of mining the database and support recent findings that suggest that type 1 diabetes includes abnormalities in the exocrine pancreas that may induce endocrine cellular stress as a trigger for autoimmunity.
CITATION STYLE
de Boer, P., Pirozzi, N. M., Wolters, A. H. G., Kuipers, J., Kusmartseva, I., Atkinson, M. A., … Giepmans, B. N. G. (2020). Large-scale electron microscopy database for human type 1 diabetes. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-16287-5
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