The Latest Biology News And Medical NewsBiology News 2Health News 2Biology News 3Health News 3
HOME >> BIOLOGY >> NEWS
Insulin grown in plants relieves diabetes in mice; UCF study holds promise for humans

Capsules of insulin produced in genetically modified lettuce could hold the key to restoring the bodys ability to produce insulin and help millions of Americans who suffer from insulin-dependent diabetes, according to University of Central Florida biomedical researchers.

Professor Henry Daniells research team genetically engineered tobacco plants with the insulin gene and then administered freeze-dried plant cells to five-week-old diabetic mice as a powder for eight weeks. By the end of the study, the diabetic mice had normal blood and urine sugar levels, and their cells were producing normal levels of insulin.

Those results and prior research indicate that insulin capsules could someday be used to prevent diabetes before symptoms appear and treat the disease in its later stages, Daniell said. He has since proposed using lettuce instead of tobacco to produce the insulin because that crop can be produced cheaply and avoids the negative stigma associated with tobacco.

The National Institutes of Health provided $2 million to fund the UCF study. The findings are reported in the July issue of Plant Biotechnology Journal.

Insulin-dependent, or Type 1, diabetes is an autoimmune disease in which the bodys immune system attacks and destroys insulin and insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas. Insulin is a hormone that is needed to convert sugar, starches and other food into energy.

Insulin typically is given through shots and not pills so the hormone can go straight into the bloodstream. In Daniells method, plant cell walls made of cellulose initially prevent insulin from degrading. When the plant cells containing insulin reach the intestine, bacteria living there begin to slowly break down the cell walls and gradually release insulin into the bloodstream.

Currently, the only relief for diabetes is a momentary relief, Daniell said. Diabetics still have to monitor their blood and urine sugar levels. They
'"/>

Contact: Chad Binette
cbinette@mail.ucf.edu
407-823-6312
University of Central Florida
30-Jul-2007


Page: 1 2

Related biology news :

1. Insulin sensitizer also serves as energy-conserving signal to the brain
2. Insulin therapy shown to treat early experimental diabetic retinopathy
3. Insulin -- in need of some restraint?
4. Insulin pathway component explains insulin resistance, age-associated metabolic syndrome
5. Insulin research builds on Nobel Laureates work
6. Insulin sensitivity gets a kick out of SOCS-7
7. Insulin spares intensive care patients from organ failure and death
8. Insulin pulses keep the liver lean
9. Scientists map air pollution using corn grown in US fields
10. Neurons grown from embryonic stem cells restore function in paralyzed rats
11. UCF, NIH study: Effective, safe anthrax vaccine can be grown in tobacco plants
Post Your Comments:
(Date:7/1/2009)...on the formation of the centromere, a key cellular...segregation and accurate cell division, has just e...restigious EMBO installation grant, of 50,000 euro...ansen moved from California to the Instituto Gulbe...ead the Epigenetic Mechanisms group. The Nature C...
(Date:7/1/2009)...tists, need to measure organic contaminants in hum...s and Technology (NIST) has recently made four new... purchase. Developed in collaboration with the Cen... human milk and serum SRMs have certified levels o...ticides, commonly found in the U.S. population. Sc...
(Date:6/30/2009)...s contemporaries postulated that food consumption ...s, that is, animals would eat as much as they coul...spring as this would allow them to. However, rece...dant, energy intake reaches a limit, even in anima...emales. Scientists at the Research Institute of Wi...
(Date:6/30/2009)...Department of Physics and Astronomy at the Univers...thod, which has led them to the discovery of fluor...lp track the uptake of drugs by the body,s cells. ...age of the new method is the independent control o...ties. The method is extremely versatile and produc...
Breaking Biology News(10 mins):Double success for Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciencia scientists working on chromosome segregation 2NIST issues human milk and blood serum SRMs for contaminant measurements 2Key to evolutionary fitness: Cut the calories 2University of Leicester researchers discover new fluorescent silicon nanoparticles 2Fathers 26apos 3B Hearing Affects Family Function and Fiscal Health 49263 1Fathers 26apos 3B Hearing Affects Family Function and Fiscal Health 49263 2Fathers 26apos 3B Hearing Affects Family Function and Fiscal Health 49263 3Fathers 26apos 3B Hearing Affects Family Function and Fiscal Health 49263 4Research from Dr Charles Gerba Finds Average Toilet Paper 26 Towel Dispensers Have More Bacteria Than Average Toilet Seat 49260 1Research from Dr Charles Gerba Finds Average Toilet Paper 26 Towel Dispensers Have More Bacteria Than Average Toilet Seat 49260 2Research from Dr Charles Gerba Finds Average Toilet Paper 26 Towel Dispensers Have More Bacteria Than Average Toilet Seat 49260 3The Presidents Council on Physical Fitness and Sports Announces 2009 Lifetime Achievement Award Winners 49257 1The Presidents Council on Physical Fitness and Sports Announces 2009 Lifetime Achievement Award Winners 49257 2The Presidents Council on Physical Fitness and Sports Announces 2009 Lifetime Achievement Award Winners 49257 3Texas Institute for Surgery at Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas Introduces the First Wireless OR in DFW 49253 1Texas Institute for Surgery at Presbyterian Hospital of Dallas Introduces the First Wireless OR in DFW 49253 2
Other News:
...llege London, the Medical Research Council, Cancer...covered an important aspect of how heterochromatin...hers, whose work is published today in Science, di...ly wrapping and unwrapping around DNA, and not sta...
...tion-based study in this week's issue of THE LANCE...c acid supplements during pregnancy do not have an........Folic acid supplements are recommended for wo...ects--such as spina bifida and anencephaly--in the...
...0, 2003 -- Citing the dramatic rise in the number ...rch of Dimes today launches a $75 million, five-ye... to increase awareness of the growing problem and ...e than 476,000 babies, or nearly 12 percent of liv...
...ts, led by Dr. Janet Rossant at the University of ...e at Mount Sinai Hospital, has identified two gene... of the blood and blood vessels in early embryogen...lecular cues that direct blood and vascular develo...
Researchers discover that DNA packaging in living cells is dynamic 2Premature births soar in US, now #1 obstetric problem 2Premature births soar in US, now #1 obstetric problem 3Sealing a cell's fate 2
Investigators at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital have used mouse models to determine why some forms of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) are extremely aggressive and resist a drug that is effec
...gton University School of Medicine in St. Louis co...cialties from their shingles by making therapy bas....When the researchers compared eight different kin...tumor was, for instance, a breast tumor, lung tumo...
...eck FUTURES INITIATIVE announced today it will beg...art Prosthetics: Exploring Assistive Devices for t...11, 2006, in Irvine, Calif. Applications must be ...the conference will receive an invitation in early...
...rm a Scottish Multiple Sclerosis research centre ...ous work at the University into the devastating co...inks with other international and UK MS experts to... major donation from Harry Potter author JK Rowli...
health news:St. Jude unlocks mystery of very aggressive leukemia 2health news:St. Jude unlocks mystery of very aggressive leukemia 3health news:Cancer therapy based on anatomical location may soon be obsolete 2health news:Cancer therapy based on anatomical location may soon be obsolete 3health news:Conference on smart prosthetics set for November 2006 2health news:JK Rowling and the MS Society Scotland fund a new MS Research Centre 2
...phia, PA) Researchers at the Abramson Cancer Cent...or volunteers to compare the effectiveness of two ...s in combination with different types of counselin... Gariti, PhD is the world's first head-to-head tr...
...nation of two drugs-both partly effective for rheu...could be an important development in substantially...e with rheumatoid arthritis, conclude authors of a...eumatoid arthritis affects around 1% of people wor...
...nal Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and...rchers a $1.7 million grant to determine whether i...eveloping into a chronic disability. ...The scien... Clark, Ph.D., from the department of physical the...
...alysis patients should be educated about the diffe...toneal dialysis and then given a choice as to whic... conducted by researchers from the Johns Hopkins B... most comprehensive studies of the quality of life...
health news:Combination drug therapy could substantially improve symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis 2health news:Researchers to design intervention for work-related injury 2health news:Patients should be consulted before dialysis treatment begins 2health news:Patients should be consulted before dialysis treatment begins 3