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Liver cells may be reprogrammed as insulin-producing beta cells

London, July 11 (ANI): Scientists may have moved a step closer to developing a potential new treatment for diabetes, by finding that human liver cells can be transformed into something like the beta cells that produce insulin in a healthy pancreas.

Sarah Ferber of the Sheba Medical Center in Tel Hashomer, Israel, says that the new findings have enabled her research team to implant these cells into diabetic monkeys.

The researcher said that she and her colleagues basically want to take liver cells from people with diabetes, reprogram the cells, and reinject them.

She says that the fact that they are the patient's own makes her believe that the cells should escape rejection by the immune system, sparing the individual a lifetime of daily insulin injections.

"Potentially, patients can be donors of their own therapeutic tissue," New Scientist magazine quoted her as saying.

Sarah says that her most recent study has provided more insights into how the Pdx-1 gene-crucial for the creation of the pancreas in the embryo-operates, something that may eventually help them design a human treatment.

By repeating the experiment and analysing the changes in gene expression as liver cells are transformed, the team showed that the gene deactivates a range of genes relevant to the cell's function in the liver, as well as activating unexpressed genes vital for beta cell function.

Sarah says that improving the scientific understanding of this dual ability, which probably arises from the role Pdx-1 plays in the embryo, where pancreas and liver tissue develop from the same family of cells, may be important in predicting how the cells might act if they are implanted into people.

She has also revealed that the technique works best in liver cells that are in the process of multiplying, and that her team have identified liver regions where dividing cells are more common, which should make reprogramming liver cells more efficient.

Sarah and her colleagues are currently searching for the best place for a transplant, but they see the liver and the omentum-the sac lining the abdomen-as leading candidates.

She recently made a presentation on her team's work at an International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR) meeting in Barcelona, Spain. (ANI)

People on low-carbohydrate diets burn more excess liver fat than those on low-calorie diets

Washington, January 20 (ANI): A study conducted by scientists at UT Southwestern Medical Center has shown that people who consume low-carbohydrate diets depend more on the oxidation of fat in the liver for energy than those on a low-calorie diet.The researchers say that their findings may have implications for treating obesity and related diseases like diabetes, insulin resistance and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease."Instead of looking at drugs to combat obesity and the diseases that stem from it, maybe.....
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