Health: Finding May Lead To New Diabetes Therapies - The Post Chronicle
A British-led study has determined glucose plays a key role in enabling cells that produce insulin to develop in an embryo's pancreas.
That discovery, said Imperial College London researchers, could lead to development of new therapies for diabetes -- a condition caused by insufficient levels of insulin.
Glucose prompts a gene called Neurogenin3 to switch on another gene, known as NeuroD, which is crucial for the normal development of beta cells. If glucose levels are low that gene is not switched on.
A British-led study has determined glucose plays a key role in enabling cells that produce insulin to develop in an embryo's pancreas.
That discovery, said Imperial College London researchers, could lead to development of new therapies for diabetes -- a condition caused by insufficient levels of insulin.
Glucose prompts a gene called Neurogenin3 to switch on another gene, known as NeuroD, which is crucial for the normal development of beta cells. If glucose levels are low that gene is not switched on.
Comments