FLORIDA, December 16, 2025: Researchers at the University of Florida’s Diabetes Institute have identified a crucial biological marker that may signal the onset of Type 1 diabetes well before symptoms appear, according to findings published in the journal Diabetes. The discovery offers new insight into how the autoimmune disease progresses and could pave the way for earlier diagnosis and intervention strategies. The study found that the smallest groupings of insulin-producing beta cells as well as individual beta cells dispersed throughout the pancreas are the first to die as the immune system begins its attack. This early destruction appears to occur before patients display the hallmark symptoms of diabetes, such as elevated blood sugar levels. These initial losses, the researchers say, mark the beginning of the immune system’s assault on the pancreas, preceding the destruction of larger, more vital cell clusters known as the islets of Langerhans.
Florida study deepens knowledge of how type 1 diabetes begins.“We did not expect that,” said Dr. Clive H. Wasserfall, the study’s senior author and a researcher at the UF Diabetes Institute. “And we can only speculate as to why that would be. This leads to a place where, if we can save these remaining bigger islets of Langerhans, perhaps one day we could prevent or delay the disease from happening.” Wasserfall added that understanding the sequence of cellular destruction provides a foundation for developing new strategies to protect pancreatic function. The team’s research may also help clinicians identify Type 1 diabetes at a much earlier stage. Detecting the disease before widespread islet loss could allow for faster, more targeted interventions that slow progression and preserve insulin production. Wasserfall emphasized that while a cure remains distant, understanding the biology of the disease’s early phases represents a significant step toward that goal.
Study offers path to early diabetes intervention
To conduct the study, researchers used advanced imaging and computational analysis on pancreatic tissue samples obtained from the UF Health-based Network for Pancreatic Organ Donors with Diabetes, or nPOD the world’s largest biorepository of pancreatic tissue dedicated to Type 1 diabetes research. The analysis revealed a clear pattern: smaller clusters of insulin-producing cells disappeared early in the disease process, while larger islets remained mostly intact in samples taken from individuals with early-stage Type 1 diabetes. “And not all the islets disappear at the same rate,” Wasserfall noted. “The smaller ones tended to go first.” This uneven pattern of cellular loss may explain why the disease progresses differently across age groups. Children, whose pancreases naturally contain a higher proportion of small islets, often lose insulin-producing capability rapidly after diagnosis. Adults, by contrast, may retain some degree of insulin production for years.
Researchers explore ways to halt immune response
The findings refine the scientific understanding of how Type 1 diabetes develops, offering a clearer picture of its earliest stages and potential opportunities for intervention. Researchers say further study will focus on uncovering why smaller beta-cell clusters are more vulnerable and how protecting them might slow or prevent the disease’s progression. The team hopes that by mapping these early cellular changes, scientists can design therapies that halt immune attacks before they reach larger islets. Such treatments could potentially preserve a patient’s natural insulin production and delay or even avert the onset of Type 1 diabetes. If successful, these approaches could transform early detection and prevention efforts, offering new hope to millions at risk worldwide. – By Content Syndication Services.