Health
Insulin "handshake" may do away with injections-studyPublish Date: Jan 14, 2013
newvision
  • mail
  • img

SYDNEY - Australian scientists have discovered how insulin is taken up by cells, potentially opening the way for new drugs for diabetes patients that can be administered without injection.

The team, whose findings appeared in Nature, solved the puzzle of how the hormone insulin binds to its receptor in cells - a process necessary for cells to take up sugar from the blood and essential for treating diabetes.

"All of that (previous) work has taken place without a detailed picture of how insulin actually interacts with the cell and tells that cell to take up glucose from the blood," leading scientist Mike Lawrence, at Australia's Walter and Eliza Hall Institute in Melbourne, told Reuters.

"What we've done is providing that picture," he said of the three-dimensional view of insulin bound to its receptor that appeared in Nature on Thursday.

Researchers found that insulin engages its receptor in a very unusual way, with both insulin and its receptor rearranging themselves as they interact.

"A piece of insulin folds out and key pieces within the receptor move to engage the insulin hormone," Lawrence said in a statement. "You might call it a 'molecular handshake'."

Insulin controls the levels of glucose, or sugar, in the blood, a mechanism that breaks down in people with diabetes.

Understanding the insulin binding process could lead to new ways to deliver insulin other than by injection, or the development of more effective and longer-lasting insulin products, Lawrence said.

"This structure is going to be a reference point for all future design of insulin," he said.

"They (drug makers) are going to use that information...for the next generation of insulin delivery devices, etc."

There are now 371 million people living with diabetes globally, up from 366 million a year ago, according to the latest report by the International Diabetes Federation.
 

The statements, comments, or opinions expressed through the use of New Vision Online are those of their respective authors, who are solely responsible for them, and do not necessarily represent the views held by the staff and management of New Vision Online.

New Vision Online reserves the right to moderate, publish or delete a post without warning or consultation with the author.Find out why we moderate comments. For any questions please contact digital@newvision.co.ug

  • mail
  • img
blog comments powered by Disqus
Also In This Section
HIV vaccine trials to start in July
RV144 trials conducted on over 16,000 individuals showed that vaccines given to individuals who participated showed a 31 percent risk reduction in acquiring HIV...
Stroke & Heart Disease-are you at risk?
Heart disease, stroke, liver and kidney disease are often described as ‘silent killers’ as there can be no warning signs. Sadly, the first symptom of a stroke is normally the stroke itself. But, according World Health Organisation, 80% of strokes can be prevented....
10 children receive free open heart surgery
Susan Nandi is full of hopes for her 3 year old girl’s future. Little Immaculate Nambowa was one of ten children who received free heart surgery at Heart Institute Mulago last week in a mission that closed yesterday....
Penile cancer: Uncircumcised men at higher risk
Okwalinga, 50, a resident of Mbale district, is weighed down because his penis was recently cut off in a surgical operation at Mbale Hospital, on the recommendation of a physician....
Long queues overwhelm vaccination centres
Several health centres across the country are still grappling with lack of vaccines for immunisation against child killer diseases, the Ministry of Health has confirmed....
Gov’t urged to levy a tax on alcohol to fund HIV
As Uganda counts a 40% reduction in AIDS-related deaths in the past decade, the AIDS commission (UAC) wants Government to levy a special tax on alcohol and cigarette to fund HIV programmes....
Uganda will get a new Cranes soccer coach this week. Who should it be?
A Ugandan coach
A top African coach
A European coach
follow us
subscribe to our news letter