Lymphoid cell infiltrates were analyzed using immunohistochemical techniques on 5 normal fetal and 6 normal neonatal pancreases. Data were compared to data obtained analyzing the lymphoid cell infiltrates in the pancreas of an 8 months old diabetic infant. In the normal fetal and neonatal pancreases islets were intact and not infiltrated. In the diabetic infant beta-cells had vanished in almost all islets, the remaining islets showed a minor infiltration with primarily T-cells, a few B-cells, and some classical macrophages. It appeared that a widespread infiltration of the exocrine pancreas with single dendritic-like cells, and T-cells, and little clusters of these cells were normal features of fetal and neonatal pancreases. In the diabetic case these infiltrative patterns were more pronounced. Larger accumulations of such lymphoid cells could also be detected in the normal fetal and neonatal pancreases and these consisted mainly of T-cell zones, sometimes containing HEV's, with intermingled interdigitating dendritic cells and a few macrophages. This architecture is reminiscent of peripheral lymphoid tissue, such as bronchus-or gut-associated lymphoid tissue. The function of this fetal/neonatal intrapancreatic lymphoid tissue (which disappears in later life) is unknown. Various possibilities are suggested such as a yet unknown ubiquitous fetal/neonatal microbial infection, tolerance induction towards islet cell antigens, an endocrine regulatory function of infiltrated lymphoid cells, and a normal ontogenetic process.
lmmunolabeling of cryo-sections of human anterior pituitaries obtained at autopsy, and of cryo-sections of freshly prepared rat anterior pituitaries, with a panel of monoclonal antibodies against markers of the monocyte/dendritic cellhnacrophage lineage, reveals in both species a characteristic pattern of immunopositive cells, among which many cells with dendritic phenotype are found. Cells characterized by marker expression of MHC-class II determinants and a dendritic morphology are present in both human and rat anterior pituitary.Markers characteristic of dendritic cells such as the L25 antigen and the OX62 antigen were present in anterior pituitaries from human and rat respectively. The population of MHC-class II expressing dendritic cells of the rat anterior pituitary is compared at the ultrastructural level with the folliculo-stellate cell population, which cell type has been previously characterized by its distinctive ultrastructure and immunopositivity for the S100 protein. Using immuno-electron microscopy of rat anterior pituitaries fixed with periodate-lysineparaformaldehyde, we were able to distinguish non-granulated cells expressing MHC-class II determinants, whereas no MHC-class II expression was found in the granulated endocrine cells. Using double immunolabeling of cryo-sections of these rat AP with 25 nm and 15 nm gold labels, we demonstrated an overlap between the populations of MHC-class Il-expressing and S100 protein-expressing cells.Furthermore, MHC-class Il-expressing and S1 00-positive cells showed ultrastructural characteristics that have been previously ascribed to folliculo-stellate cells. At the light microscopical level in the rat AP, a proportion of 10 to 20% of the SlOO-positive cells was found immunopositive for the MHC-class II marker 0x6. In the human AP, S1 00-positive folliculo-stellate cells and cells expressing the leukocyte common antigen CD45 were found to occupy predominantly different tissue compartments in the human anterior pituitary, namely the epithelial parenchyme cords and perivascular compartments respectively. A proportion of CD45' cells was found in the parenchyme compartment and, vice versa, indicating an overlap of the tissue compartments in which both cell types occur. However, at the light microscopical level we could not find cells expressing both the S100 and CD45 marker. The present finding of a proportion of S1 00-positive pituitary cells with ultrastructural and immunohistochemical characteristics of both dendritic cells and folliculo-stellate cells, confirms the suggested heterogeneity of the latter cell group with respect to their ultrastructural phenotype and putative function. The possibility of a myeloid origin of part of the folliculo-stellate cell group in the AP, is discussed and might elucidate some of the didcrepancies in the literature concerning the embryological origin of this cell group.
Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is an autoimmune disease whose notorious pathologic feature is insulitis accompanied by destruction of beta-cells. In this morphological study, we examined the pancreatic events during the onset of diabetes in spontaneously diabetic BB/Organon rats. Dendritic cells were the first cells to accumulate around the islets, followed by lymphocytes. Scavenger macrophages and MHC class II-positive beta-cells were only seen late in the disease. These observations suggest a role for antigen-presenting dendritic cells in the onset of the beta-cell-specific autoimmune reaction and emphasize the necessity to distinguish between the several monocyte-macrophage subtypes in studies on the pathogenesis of IDDM.
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