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New insights
into cause of diabetes emerge from U-M research
ANN ARBOR,
May 1, 2008:
University
of Michigan researchers have new clues to what goes awry at the
cellular level in type 2 diabetes. Their results, published
in the Journal of the American Chemical
Society (JACS), challenge conventional views of how the
disease is initiated and may lead to development of drugs to treat
aging-related diseases, as well as diabetes.
One of the most striking hallmarks of type 2 diabetes is the
presence of clumped protein fibers called amyloids in the
insulin-producing cells of the pancreas. Previous research has
suggested that amyloid formation somehow damages the membranes
surrounding those cells, killing the cells and precipitating
diabetes. But associate professor of chemistry and biophysics
Ayyalusamy Ramamoorthy and coworkers show in the new study that
membrane damage can occur independently of amyloid formation and
that the protein involved, known as Islet Amyloid Polypeptide
Protein (IAPP), has separate regions responsible for amyloid
formation and membrane disruption.
“It was already known that amyloid fibers themselves are not
especially harmful to cells, but it was thought that the process
of amyloid formation might generate toxic intermediates that
caused membrane damage. This issue has been the subject of active
debate," Ramamoorthy said.
By breaking off one end of the protein and testing the resulting
fragment's properties, the U-M group learned that the fragment can
disrupt membranes and cause cell death as effectively as the
full-length protein, without forming amyloids.
Then, comparing the human form of the IAPP with the rat version,
which does not cause cell death, the researchers found that a
difference of a single amino acid (protein building block)
accounts for the toxicity. In conjunction with chemistry and
pharmacology professor Robert T. Kennedy, Ramamoorthy is now
studying the protein in living cells and obtaining the same
results as with the model cell membranes used in the recent JACS
paper.
Although IAPP is believed to contribute to the development of type
2 diabetes, drugs to suppress the role of IAPP in diabetes have
not yet been developed, mainly because the molecular mechanism by
which IAPP becomes toxic has been a mystery. In addition, the
presence of toxic and non-toxic forms of the same protein in human
body considerably complicates the discovery of what makes the
protein toxic.
“Interestingly, this is exactly the same problem that has been
limiting research progress in discovering drugs to treat other
devastating aging-related amyloid diseases like Alzheimer's,
Parkinson's, Huntington's and mad cow
disease,” Ramamoorthy said. “Our key finding of a version
of the protein that exists in only one stable toxic form
considerably simplifies the search for compounds to prevent these
diseases.”
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