The Borneo Post

Stem cell treatment offers new hope for diabetics

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TOKYO: A new technique that grows insulin-producing cells and can protect them from immune a ack a er they are transplant­ed may offer new hope for treating some people with diabetes.

In Type-1 diabetes, the body turns on itself and a acks the socalled beta cells inside clusters in the pancreas called ‘islets’.

These beta cells are responsibl­e for gauging sugar levels in the blood and releasing insulin to keep them stable. Without them, diabetics must rely on insulin injections or pumps.

One treatment devised to end that reliance involves transplant­ing donor islets into diabetics, but the process is complicate­d by several obstacles, including a shortage of donors.

Islets also o en fail to connect with blood supply, and even when they do, like other transplant­s, they can come under a ack by the recipient’s immune system, which views the cells as invaders.

As a result, patients have to take drugs that suppress their immune systems, protecting their transplant but potentiall­y exposing the rest of their body to illness.

In a bid to overcome some of these challenges, a team looked to find another source for islets, by coaxing induced pluripoten­t stem cells (iPS) to produce what the team called HILOs, or human islet-like organoids.

These HILOs, when grown in a 3D environmen­t mimicking the pancreas and then turbocharg­ed with a ‘genetic switch’, successful­ly produced insulin and were able to regulate blood glucose when transplant­ed into diabetic mice.

“In the past, this functional­ity was only achieved a er a monthlong maturation in a living animal,” said Ronald Evans, director of the Gene Expression Lab at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies.

“This breakthrou­gh allows for the production of functional HILOs which are active on the first day of transplant­ation, placing us closer to clinical applicatio­ns,” Evans, who led the study, told AFP.

Having found a potential way to solve the supply chain problem, the scientists then sought to tackle the issue of immune rejection.

They focused on something called PD-L1, a so-called checkpoint protein that is known to inhibit the body’s immune response.

In cancer treatments, medication is sometimes used to block PD-L1, boosting the body’s immune response to cancer cells.

The team effectivel­y reversed that process, and induced the HILOs to express the protein in a bid to outwit the immune system.

“Normally, human cells placed in a mouse would be eliminated within a day or two,” said Evans.

“We discovered a way to create an immune shield that makes human cells invisible to the immune system.”

While HILOs transplant­ed into mice without the PD-L1 protection gradually stopped functionin­g, those induced to express the protein were shielded and continued to help diabetic mice regulate their blood glucose for more than 50 days.

Being able to grow insulinpro­ducing cells and protect them from a ack “brings us much closer to having a potential therapy for type-1 diabetic patients,” Evans said.

Around 422 million people worldwide were living with diabetes by 2014, according to the World Health Organisati­on, a figure that includes both type-1 and type-2 diabetes.

Islet transplant­ation is generally considered as a treatment for type-1 diabetics, whose disease is the result of an auto-immune response.

Evans cautioned that the research, already a decade in the making, was still years from being able to treat diabetes in humans.

“To advance HILOs into the clinic, we need to confirm that they work in other animal models, including primates, as well as do longer-term studies in mice,” he said.

He hopes that human studies of the technique will be possible in two to five years.

“This is a hard-to-manage disease and insulin is not a cure,” he added, noting that 1.6 million children and teenagers are living with type-1 diabetes in the US alone.

“Good science is not just a discovery — it can enrich the world and give hope to those who live with disease.” — AFP

This is a hard-to-manage disease and insulin is not a cure. Good science is not just a discovery –it can enrich the world and give hope to those who live with disease. Ronald Evans

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