“Lazy Insulin Granules”
Sujatha Ramasamy, Scientist, New Delhi.
Diabetes is a group of
metabolic diseases in which a person has high blood sugar,
either because the body does not produce enough insulin, or
because cells do not respond to the insulin that is produced. This high
blood sugar produces the classical symptoms of polyuria (frequent
urination), polydipsia (increased thirst) and polyphagia (increased
hunger).
There are interesting information on diabetes research reveleas
that Dr. Herbert Gaisano, a researcher at the Toronto Western Research
Institute, at the University of Toronto, shows the role of SNARE protein known
as VAMP8 is crucial to inducing "newcomer insulin secretory granules"
to move to the front of the line and fuse to the plasma membrane, where they
are able to release insulin into the bloodstream."In patients with
diabetes, the granules become lazy, meaning they don't want to fuse to the
plasma membrane, which they need to do so in order to release insulin,"
said Dr. Gaisano, the study's lead author. "Newcomer granules, on the
other hand want to reach the plasma membrane and fuse right away -- this is why
VAMP8 is so important, this protein makes newcomers rush to the front and fuse,
and which actually more than compensated for the lazy granules."Thus this
new information paves way to explain how the new class of diabetes drugs that
mimic glucagon-like peptide (GLP)-1 works to increase insulin secretion in the
body, which Dr. Gaisano's group has found in this study to be acting via VAMP8.
With a better understanding of the exact mechanisms that influence GLP-1 drug
actions (a major focus of research in Toronto), future drug therapies can be
made more effective.A second set of findings where also revelead by the Gaisano
team that the absence of VAMP8 causes more islet beta cell growth, by directly
influencing beta cell division i.e. mitosis. This is of importance since beta
cells are destroyed in type 1 diabetes (most common type in children) and the
latter stages of type 2 diabetes (in adults), and hence inducing an increase in
beta cell proliferation would be of great benefit to all diabetic patients.
This discovery in Toronto on a novel mechanism of insulin
secretion and beta-cell growth continues the excellence and proud history that
started from the discovery of insulin by Banting (Nobel Prize, 1923), Macleod
(Nobel Prize, 1923), Collip and Best in Toronto. This underscores the need to
sustain the almost century-long support for diabetes research at the most basic
science and molecular level. "While insulin and other therapies help
people living with diabetes successfully manage the disease for many years, it
remains a condition that adversely impacts many organs (heart, kidneys, and
eyes) of the body causing many health complications," said Dr. Gaisano.
Reference: Diabetes
Research Reveals Important Link to Overcoming 'Lazy Insulin Granules'
ScienceDaily (July 26, 2012)
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