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Ultimate
Diabetes Survivors, the Joslin 50-Year
Medalists, give clues to cures
Newswise,
August 2010 — In type 1 diabetes, the body
relentlessly attacks and destroys its own
insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells.
But a study by Joslin Diabetes Center
scientists now has firmly established that
some of these cells endure for many decades
in a small group of people with the
disease—offering clues to potential
treatments for preserving and even restoring
the crucial cell population.
Joslin has been awarding 50-Year Medals to
people with insulin-dependent diabetes since
1972. The finding comes from the Joslin
50-Year Medalist Study, which examines this
select cohort to discover protective factors
for their long-term survival.
Published online by Diabetes this
week, the research analyzed pancreatic
function in 411 Medalists and examined nine
pancreases from Medalist organ donors.
Blood samples showed that many in this group
exhibit C-peptide molecules (a marker of
insulin production), blood glucose levels
that rise less after a meal than would be
expected in the absence of insulin, and
signs of autoimmune attack.
Moreover, all of the donated pancreases
displayed active insulin-producing beta
cells, with some of the cells scattered
individually and others clumped with
different kinds of hormone-producing cells
in the normal pancreatic structures called
islets.
Most strikingly, some of the beta cells
showed signs of cell proliferation, cell
death and autoimmune attack.
“We’ve clearly demonstrated that functional
beta cells are still in the pancreas,” says
Hillary Keenan, Ph.D., Joslin research
associate and first author on the paper.
“The evidence that these insulin-producing
cells are both growing and dying is very
important from a treatment point of view,”
says George King, M.D., senior author on the
paper and head of the Dianne Nunnally Hoppes
Laboratory for Diabetes Complications. “If
we could increase the rate of growth and
decrease the rate of death, we potentially
could build up more insulin-producing cells
and lead to a treatment or a cure.”
Another major component to the Medalist
study is the pursuit of factors that protect
against diabetic complications. The
Medalists provide an extraordinary
opportunity for this research due to the
high proportion who are free from
complications. This search for protective
rather than risk factors is part of a
paradigm shift in Joslin’s diabetes
complications studies, says Dr. King, who
also is Joslin’s chief scientific officer
and a professor of medicine at Harvard
Medical School.
One impetus for the study of pancreatic
insulin production in the Medalist cohort
came in 2004 from an insight by Medalist
Elizabeth Saalfeld, a Virginia resident who
then had lived with diabetes for almost 60
years. Mrs. Saalfeld noted that at times her
insulin requirements were so low that she
believed her body was still making the
hormone. She mentioned her observation to
Dr. King, and follow-up lab analyses
suggested that she was right.
Other contributors to the Diabetes paper
include Jennifer K. Sun, Jared Levine,
Alessandro Doria, Lloyd P. Aiello and Susan
Bonner-Weir from Joslin and George
Eisenbarth of the Barbara Davis Center for
Childhood Diabetes in Denver. Funding was
provided by the Juvenile Diabetes Research
Foundation (JDRF), National Institute of
Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disorders,
Beatson Foundation, Brehm Foundation, and
Eli Lilly. Pancreas donation was supported
by the Network for Pancreatic Organ Donors,
which is sponsored by JDRF.
About Joslin Diabetes Center
Joslin Diabetes Center is the world's
preeminent diabetes research and clinical
care organization. Founded in 1898 by
Elliott P. Joslin, M.D., Joslin is an
independent, nonprofit institution
affiliated with Harvard Medical School.
Joslin does not endorse products or
services.
For more information about Joslin, visit www.joslin.org.
Keep up with Joslin research and clinical
news at Inside Joslin:www.joslin.org/news/inside_joslin.html,
friend Joslin on Facebook at www.facebook.com/joslindiabetescenter and
follow on Twitter at www.twitter.com/JoslinDiabetes.