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New approach to treat diabetes without insulin: Children’s Hospital study

Researchers at the Boston-based Children's Hospital have discovered a way to normalize blood sugar which does not involve insulin, yet could offer a new therapeutic approach to both type 1 and 2 kinds of diabetes.

Children’s Hospital Division of Endocrinology physician and researcher Umut Ozcan has demonstrated that the regulatory protein XBP-1s, when activated artificially in the liver, can normalize high blood sugar in both lean, insulin-deficient type 1 diabetic mice and obese, insulin-resistant type 2 diabetic mice.

This indicates that approaches aimed at increasing XBP-1s activity may benefit patients with either type of diabetes, and follows Ozcan’s previous work when he identified XBP-1s as a key to the body’s sensitivity to insulin, and showed its function to be impaired in the cases of obesity.

In this study, Ozcan and colleagues have shown XBP-1s to be capable of regulating blood sugar by degrading the FoxO1protein, which increases glucose output from the liver and stimulates feeding behavior in the brain.

This degradation is independent of XBP-1s’ effect on the insulin signaling system, and automatically leads to a blood glucose level reduction, and increased glucose tolerance.

Ozcan is now trying to find practical ways to activate XBP-1s which would lend themselves to clinical development.