Liver
Cells Converted into Pancreatic Ones
Scientific
coaxing holds promise for diabetes
Scientists have succeeded
in transforming liver cells into pancreatic cells, a feat that holds
enormous promise for the 150 million people worldwide who are living
with diabetes.
The research is detailed
in a recent issue of the journal Current Biology.
"This is very, very important
work," says Dr. Robert Fisher, professor of surgery and director
of liver transplantation and transplantation research at Virginia
Commonwealth University Medical Center in Richmond. "It's a beautiful
experiment and very well done."
Pancreas
Holds the Key to Curing Diabetes
The pancreas, which produces
the hormone insulin, holds the key to curing diabetes. In healthy
human beings, insulin is released after we eat to ferry glucose
out of the bloodstream. People with type 1 diabetes produce no insulin
at all and have to self-administer injections timed with their eating.
People with type 2 diabetes, by far the most prevalent form
of the disease, keep their condition under control with a combination
of diet, exercise and, in some cases, medication and insulin as
well.
Scientists have been experimenting
for years with different ways to boost the functioning of the pancreas,
including transplanting the islet cells that produce insulin. Although
exciting advances have been made, no widely available therapy has
yet emerged.
The
Transdifferentiation Approach
Here, the scientists used
an approach called transdifferentiation, which involves converting
one type of cell to another (in this case, liver cells to pancreatic
cells).
"Other people have tried
to convert cells with gene therapy, but a lot of times one single
protein isn't enough. You need a combination of different factors,"
explains Marko Horb, lead author of the study and a postdoctoral
research officer at the Centre for Regenerative Medicine at the
University of Bath in England.
Horb and his colleagues
basically engineered a souped-up version of a gene called Pdx1,
which is necessary for fashioning the pancreas out of undifferentiated
embryonic or stem cells.
The idea was to introduce
the super-Pdx1 into liver cells to determine if they would produce
pancreatic cells.
The theory worked in two
different tests, one using human cells and the other using tadpoles
of the African clawed frog.
When the Pdx1 gene was
added to human liver cells in the laboratory, the cells acquired
characteristics of pancreas cells and some even produced insulin.
When added to tadpole
liver cells, again, the Pdx1 seemed to produce all of the cell types
usually found in a pancreas.
This is somewhat different
from stem cell research in that the tadpole cells were in the process
of differentiating into pancreatic cells, though the cells were
far from mature. Other researchers were able to create, out of mouse
stem cells, organs that not only produced insulin but also produced
in response to the presence of glucose in the bloodstream. In other
words, it functioned like a normal pancreas.
Additional
Research Is Necessary
The current research leaves
much to be done.
"The experiment they really
need to do is take a mature animal and show that, again, they can
get some transformation," Fisher says.
"They didn't do a functional
study," adds Dr. Lijun Yang, assistant professor of pathology at
the University of Florida College of Medicine in Gainesville. "Whether
the cell can respond [to glucose] by releasing insulin is very important.
In order to be useful, you have to be regulated by glucose. You
don't want cells to continuously release insulin. It's exciting
but the next question is can these cells really function and in
response to glucose, respond to changes in the external environment."
The authors fully agree
with the statements. "All we've done at this stage is to show, that
with the gene we put in, a certain proportion of cells that received
it became part of the pancreas," Horb says. "They produced insulin
and amylase but we haven't shown they work in response. The important
thing is to show they respond to glucose."
Jonathan Slack, who led
the research team, believes that, if future research goes well,
the method could start helping persons with diabetes in a decade.
And the approach could
have other applications. "The article is also important in understanding
pancreatic cancer," Fisher says. "Some of the things they are exploring
may be important in why cells become malignant."
Always consult your physician
for more information.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization is not
responsible for the content of Internet sites.)
American
Diabetes Association
American
Heart Association
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Current
Biology
Diabetes
Care
Journal
of Nutrition
National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
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March
2003
Scientific
Coaxing Holds Promise For Diabetes
Pancreas
Holds the Key to Curing Diabetes
The
Transdifferentiation Approach
Additional
Research Is Necessary
Are
All Elderly at Risk for Diabetes?
'Good'
Fatty Acid for Persons With Diabetes
Online
Resources
In Other Diabetes Health
News:
Are
All Elderly at Risk for Diabetes?
Even elderly persons
of normal weight may still be at risk
Large amounts of muscle
fat or visceral abdominal fat may put elderly men and women with
normal body weight at risk for developing type 2 diabetes.
Even though they are not overweight, they may still be at risk for
developing diabetes, says a recent study published in the journal
Diabetes Care. An important factor in that risk
is where their body fat is stored.
The prevalence of type
2 diabetes is highest among men and women over age 65, but the level
of obesity in this group is only 14 percent, compared with 24 percent
for people in their 50s.
To better understand this,
the researchers studied 2,964 men and women, mean age 73.6. The
study group was 58.3 percent Caucasian and 48.5 percent male.
Of the people in the study,
51 percent were classified as having normal glucose tolerance, 21
percent classified as having impaired glucose tolerance, and 24
percent as having type 2 diabetes.
The researchers used CT
scans to determine muscle and fat in the thighs and abdomens of
the people in the study.
They found that 30 percent
of obese men and 34 percent of obese women had type 2 diabetes.
The study also found that proportion of intermuscular fat and visceral
abdominal fat was higher in the men and women with type 2 diabetes
and impaired glucose tolerance.
Among those with diabetes,
22 percent were normal-weight men and 12 percent were normal-weight
women.
Overall, the study found
that two-thirds of the men with diabetes were not obese and there
was a similar pattern in the women.
That suggests that obesity
is not the only factor that causes diabetes or glucose intolerance
in elderly men and women. Fat distribution is also a key determination
of those health issues in elderly people, the study authors say.
Always consult your physician
for more information.
'Good'
Fatty Acid for Persons With Diabetes
Linoleic acid
may benefit people with the disease
An essential fatty acid
called conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) may help people with diabetes
reduce their weight and blood sugar.
A study that appears in
a recent issue of the Journal of Nutrition says
persons with diabetes who supplemented their diets with CLA had
lower body mass and lower blood sugar levels by the end of the eight-week
study.
The study also found that
higher CLA levels in the bloodstream meant lower levels of leptin,
a hormone believed to regulate fat levels. High leptin levels may
play a role in obesity, which is a major risk factor for adult-onset,
or type 2, diabetes.
Always consult your physician
for more information.
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