Scientists Closer to a Cure For Type 2 Diabetes
SUNDAY, July 26 (HealthDay News) -- Scientists may be closer to solving a medical mystery with huge implications for personal and public health: Why obese people are prone to developing type 2 diabetes.
A series of studies appearing online July 26 in Nature Medicine suggest that inflammation within the fat tissues of heavy individuals could trigger the blood sugar disease.
What's more, each of the four completely independent studies, from two continents and three countries, showed that interfering with these immune-cell processes actually reversed diabetes in mice.
The long-term implications of the findings are enticing: perhaps one day a cure for type 2 diabetes, a condition that now plagues more than 23 million people in the United States alone.
"This group of papers suggests that cellular immunity may regulate inflammation in fat," said Dr. Vivian Fonseca, professor of medicine at Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine and director of the Diabetes Institute at Scott & White. "The authors do suggest that if you change the inflammatory response by changing the way the body cells respond to a trigger for inflammation, you might be able to get at the real heart of diabetes and that suggests you could cure it."
But Fonseca warned, all these studies were conducted in mice and have yet to be proven in humans
In type 2 diabetes, the body often becomes resistant to insulin and doesn't use it effectively. In the last decade or so, researchers have presented evidence that suppressing inflammation in animals could improve insulin resistance and other processes involved with diabetes. Inflammation is now widely believed to be involved in many metabolic diseases afflicting obese individuals. Inflammation in fat tissue, in particular, seems to be a culprit, by changing fat tissue function, thereby contributing to insulin resistance.
But the exact mechanisms of the phenomenon have been unclear.
Three papers, one from Japan, one from Canada and one from the United States, showed that immune system cells known as T cells were deficient in obese mice, pushing the immune system to somehow initiate insulin resistance.
Restoring T cells to more normal levels actually reversed weight gain and improved insulin resistance, even when the mice continued on a high-fat diet.
The fourth study looked at another class of immune cells called mast cells, which are more commonly linked to allergies.
An over-abundance of mast cells contributed to obesity and diabetes in mice, but when mast cells were removed from the system the problem was corrected, explained study senior author Guo-Ping Shi, a biochemist with Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.
"We gave mice a high-fat diet for three months and they developed obesity and diabetes," he said. But mice that had been stripped of mast cells did not. "These mice are protected from the disease if they are without these cells," Shi said.
Shi's team also gave wild-type ("normal") mice allergy medicines, which work to "stabilize" mast cells. This also led to improvements in the mice.
"We can use the drugs to manipulate cell activity or prevent disease in this case," Shi said.
Shi said he has signed a contract with a local company to develop a version of the drugs to combat diabetes in humans.
More information
There's more on type 2 diabetes at the American Diabetes Association.
(SOURCES: Guo-Ping Shi, D.Sc., biochemist, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston; Vivian Fonseca, M.D., professor, internal medicine, Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine, chief, endocrinology, and director, Diabetes Institute, Scott & White; July 26, 2009, Nature Medicine, online)

And start testing the people! Diabetes has been around for a good while now, and much of it can be attributed to the kinds of foods and liquids that we ingest. Since the first can of processed food went out to the public for purchase, diabetes has been on the rise. Now we have to deal with obese children and overweight young adults with diabetes, thanks in part to unhealthy sugar-and-sodium-loaded diets, sedentary lifestyles, and lack of exercise! I believe that treating diabetes with medication and insulin is expensive to maintain, and definitely not the best way to fight this disease. Scientists and researchers should speed up the testing and offer a cure soon, as in the next 4 to 5 years. The wait has been long enough!
As the leading scientist of this study, I have the same feeling as yours. However, my recent grant was not funded by the NIH. We wanted to start with primates first before humans, which will take us 6 mon to 1 year and $1 mil. Lack of fund will delay this study. We have to write another proposal to the NIH, which take normally 1-2 years to get approved. This is our real life. G Shi
G Shi, I feel you, as people now say. Too bad agencies like the NIH appear as if they are either too swamped with requests or simply not that concerned about seeing study projects and research getting out into the real world as quickly as possible. It is also a shame that it takes a million dollars to conduct one of your studies. It would be nice if our U.S. government had an easier way to encourage and fund all testing and speed up the time needed from testing and trials to actual patient use among the general public. How much money do researchers need to spend and how many people will need to die before these epidemics finally hit home with a catastrophe like the Bubonic Plague to finally bring about real change? I pray and hope that you will win this very-prolonged battle.
Thank you for your understanding. A good proposal can be killed if handled by the wrong reviewers.