Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9902215 Journal of Immunological Methods 2005 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
The immune system is shaped by the random generation of lymphocytes followed by apoptosis of self-reactive cells, a process termed negative selection. The survival of these pathogenic cells in the periphery can elicit autoreactivity. We describe the development of a biomarker assay for the detection of pathogenic subpopulations of lymphoid cells in adult non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice based on disease-specific alterations in spontaneous or triggered cell death. Utilizing improved methods of cell separations, two distinct lymphoid cell subpopulations with increased susceptibility to apoptosis were identified and quantified. A subpopulation of CD8+ T cells that constitutes ∼ 3-7% of the total CD8+ T cell population underwent apoptosis on exposure to low concentrations of TNF-α. Such cells were exclusively detected only in NOD mice with histologic signs of active autoreactivity. The non-T cell compartment of NOD immune system, although resistant to TNF-α-induced apoptosis, contained a subpopulation of B cells with spontaneous death by culture alone. The refined detection of small numbers of lymphoid cell subsets with quantifiable differences in apoptosis provides a possible immune biomarker for monitoring disease activity or treatment interventions.
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