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Explore the role of adult stem cells in regenerating beta cells to produce insulin in type 1 diabetes. Learn about pancreatic function, insulin, diabetes types, and ongoing research on beta cell replacement methods.
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Stem Cells and Diabetes The Present
Background • Diabetes affects more people and causes more deaths each year than breast cancer and AIDS combined. • The American Diabetes Association estimates that 16 million people, 5.9% of the U.S. population, currently has some type of diabetes.
What is diabetes? • group of diseases • abnormally high levels of glucose in the blood • possible complications include blindness, stroke, kidney failure, heart disease, poor circulation, and amputation
Type 1 Diabetes • juvenile-onset • typically affects children and young adults • immune system attacks and destroys beta cells (β cells) in the islets of Langerhans of the pancreas that normally produce insulin • glucose does not enter the cells and therefore accumulates in the blood
Type 2 Diabetes • adult-onset diabetes • typically affects older, sedentary, and overweight individuals with a family history of diabetes • body cannot use insulin effectively • due to insulin resistance, glucose accumulates in the blood
What is insulin? • peptide hormone • synthesized within the β cells of the islets of Langerhans located in the pancreas • affects metabolism and other body functions • causes cells in the liver, muscle, and fat tissue to take up glucose from the bloodstream
Question: In type I diabetics, is it possible to get cells to produce insulin? • two possible sources of cells • existing cells • adult stem cells
What are adult stem cells? They are: • undifferentiated cells that occur in differentiated tissue • able to make identical copies of themselves • able to yield specialized cell types of the tissue from which they originated • do not replicate indefinitely in culture
Researchers are Investigating: • Is it possible to activate the differentiation of adult stem cells present in the pancreas in order to produce needed insulin in type I diabetics? • What advantage/disadvantage would this have over organ/islet transplantation or insulin injection?
Researchers Would Need to Know: • Are there adult stem cells present in the pancreas that differentiate into beta cells? • Are adult pancreatic beta cells formed by self-duplication, stem cell differentiation, or a combination of the two processes?
Mouse-Model Study A pulse-chase experiment performed by Professor Douglas Melton and his team provides important information about how beta cells are replaced.
Keep in mind that cells are replaced by: • Adult stem cells • Mitotic division of existing cells • Combination of the two