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Demonstration of Tissue Resident Memory CD8 T Cells in Insulitic Lesions in Adult Patients with Recent-Onset Type 1 Diabetes.

Subtypes of CD8(+) T cells in insulitic lesions in biopsy specimens from six subjects with recent-onset type 1 diabetes (T1D) and six nondiabetic matched controls were analyzed using simultaneous multicolor immunofluorescence. Also, insulitic islets based on accumulation of CD3(+) T cells were microdissected with laser-capture microscopy, and gene transcripts associated with inflammation and autoimmunity were analyzed. We found a substantial proportion, 43%, of the CD8(+) T cells in the insulitic lesions to display a tissue resident memory T cell (TRM) (CD8(+)CD69(+)CD103(+)) phenotype in T1D subjects. Most TRM cells were located in the insulitic lesion in the endocrine-exocrine interface. TRM cells were also sporadically found in islets of control subjects. Moreover, gene expression analysis showed a lack of active transcription of genes associated with acute inflammatory or cytotoxic T-cell responses. We present evidence that a substantial proportion of T cells in insulitic lesions of recent-onset T1D patients are TRM cells and not classic cytotoxic CD8(+) T cells. Our findings highlight the need for further analysis of the T cells involved in insulitis to elucidate their role in the etiology of T1D.

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