Journal article
IFNγ-Induced MHC Class II expression on islet endothelial cells is an early marker of insulitis but is not required for diabetogenic CD4 T cell migration
NA Scott, Y Zhao, B Krishnamurthy, SI Mannering, TWH Kay, HE Thomas
Frontiers in Immunology | FRONTIERS MEDIA SA | Published : 2018
Abstract
Diabetogenic T cells infiltrate the pancreatic islets by transmigrating across the microcapillaries residing close to, or within, the pancreatic islets. Deficiency in IFNγ signaling prevents efficient migration of T cells into the pancreatic islets, but the IFNγ-regulated molecules that mediate this are uncertain. Homing of autoreactive T cells into target tissues may require antigen specificity through presentation of cognate antigen by MHC expressed on the vascular endothelium. We investigated the hypothesis that IFNγ promotes the migration of islet antigen-specific CD4+ T cells by upregulating MHC class II on islet endothelial cells (IEC), thereby providing an antigen-specific signal for ..
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Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was funded by National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC) Project grants (GNT1123586, GNT1145507, and GNT1123586), Program grant (GNT1037321), and fellowship (GNT1042735, HT) and Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (BK, and 5-CDA-2014-210-A-N, SM). St Vincent's Institute receives support from the Operational Infrastructure Support Scheme of the Government of Victoria.