| Literature DB >> 25142715 |
Alberto Pugliese1, Francesco Vendrame, Helena Reijonen, Mark A Atkinson, Martha Campbell-Thompson, George W Burke.
Abstract
The Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF) Network for Pancreatic Organ Donors with Diabetes (JDRF nPOD) was established to obtain human pancreata and other tissues from organ donors with type 1 diabetes (T1D) in support of research focused on disease pathogenesis. Since 2007, nPOD has recovered tissues from over 100 T1D donors and distributed specimens to approximately 130 projects led by investigators worldwide. More recently, nPOD established a programmatic expansion that further links the transplantation world to nPOD, nPOD-Transplantation; this effort is pioneering novel approaches to extend the study of islet autoimmunity to the transplanted pancreas and to consent patients for postmortem organ donation directed towards diabetes research. Finally, nPOD actively fosters and coordinates collaborative research among nPOD investigators, with the formation of working groups and the application of team science approaches. Exciting findings are emerging from the collective work of nPOD investigators, which covers multiple aspects of islet autoimmunity and beta cell biology.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25142715 PMCID: PMC4174350 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-014-0530-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diab Rep ISSN: 1534-4827 Impact factor: 4.810
Fig. 1Operational scheme of the JDRF nPOD. The scheme illustrates interaction with the organ procurement organization to identify organ donors relevant to nPOD research and the nPOD-Transplantation model that allows pancreas transplant recipients to consent for organ donation to nPOD to support T1D research. Tissues are distributed to investigators and working groups to support advances in research and hopefully the discovery of novel therapeutic targets
Fig. 2Example on insulitis in the transplanted pancreas from a patient who had developed recurrent islet autoimmunity despite immunosuppression. Pancreatic beta cells are stained for insulin (brown); infiltrating lymphocytes are stained for CD3 (red)