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April 25, 2013
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/04/25/hormone-diabetes-treatment/2112673/
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Excerpts [with inserts, not part of original
article, included in brackets]:
... betatrophin can produce a roughly seventeenfold
increase in these cells [pancreatic beta cells, the
cells which produce insulin], and its increase may
partly explain the rapid growth of these cells seen
during pregnancy to feed developing fetuses in
mammals, including people.
"This is really an amazing discovery. Hormones with
this kind of effect aren't discovered very often, and
this opens a whole new pathway to treating ... [High
Glucose Conditions].
... the hormone's effects, which the study team sees
as isolated to beta cells, need to be thoroughly inves-
tigated in animal studies for safety. ...
... "Of course, we are a long way from a treatment.
But if this could be used in people, what I think it
could mean eventually is that instead of taking insulin
injections [multiple times per day] ... you might take
an injection of this hormone once a week or once a
month," says study senior author Doug Melton of the
Harvard Stem Cell Institute, in a commentary pro-
vided by the university.
Melton is best known as a prominent human stem
cell researcher, whose own children suffer from
... [Insulinitis (old name: type 1 diabetes, formerly
called juvenile diabetes)]; he has previously done
pioneering research on how beta cells grow during
development.
In the study, the team reports that young mice given
the hormone grew just enough new beta cells to
counteract the drug's effects, no more.
"Before it can be established if this finding has any
relevance to human therapy it will need to be estab-
lished (that) the molecule drives beta cell replication
in humans," ... a variety of compounds have earlier
been identified that drive beta cell growth in young
mice but these have then not had the same effect
on beta cells in people.
The study researchers acknowledge they don't know
exactly how the hormone spurs the growth of beta
cells, whether directly or by triggering a cascade of
activity that leads to more of them. The researchers
have entered into agreement with two pharmaceu-
tical firms, Evatec and Jansen, to investigate treat-
ments with the hormone. The study was largely
funded by research money from the 2009 federal
stimulus, Melton says.
...
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Pro-Humanist FREELOVER
C.ure I.nsulinitis A.ssociation
http://prohuman.net/cureinsulinitisassociation.htm
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