The immunofluorescent image shows human islet grafts that were pretreated with three small molecules (and controls for comparison) and transplanted into female or male mice. (IMAGE)
Caption
The immunofluorescent image shows human islet grafts that were pretreated with three small molecules (and controls for comparison) and transplanted into female or male mice. One week after transplantation, females, but not males, have increased numbers of cells producing insulin (green) and glucagon (red) compared with untreated grafts.
Credit
Image courtesy of J. Jeya Vandana/Weill Cornell Medicine
Usage Restrictions
Credit
License
Licensed content