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Turning off brain's hormone-producing cells may help cure diabetes
Aug 10, 10:44 am
Washington, August 10 (ANI): Neurobiologists at Wake Forest University have made a discovery that has dramatic potential for research into weight-loss drugs and diabetes treatment.In a study on fruit flies, they have found that manipulating a group of hormone-producing cells in the brain can control blood sugar levels in the body.The researchers examine how fruit flies (Drosophila) react when confronted with a decreased diet.Reduced diet or starvation normally leads to hyperactivity in fruit flies - a hungry fly buzzes around feverishly, looking for more food. That happens because an enzyme called AMP-activated kinase stimulates the secretion of the adipokinetic hormone, which is the functional equivalent of glucagon. This hormone acts opposite of insulin, as it tells the body to release the sugar, or food, needed to fuel that hyperactivity. The body uses up its energy stores until it finds food.But when Wake Forest's Erik Johnson, an associate professor of biology, and his research team turned off AMP-activated kinase, the cells decreased sugar release and the hyperactive response stopped almost completely - even in the face of starvation."Since fruit flies and humans share 30 percent of the same genes and our brains are essentially wired the same way, it suggests that this discovery could inform metabolic research in general and diabetes research specifically," said Johnson, the study's principal investigator. "The basic biophysical, biochemical makeup is the same. The difference in complexity is in the number of cells. Why flies are so simple is that they have approximately 100,000 neurons versus the approximately 11 billion in humans," he noted.Adipokinetic hormone is the insect equivalent to the hormone glucagon in the human pancreas. Glucagon raises blood sugar levels; insulin reduces them. However, it is difficult to study glucagon systems because the pancreatic cells are hard to pull apart.Studying how this similar system works in the fruit fly could pave the way to a drug that targets the cells that cause glucagon to tell the body to release sugar into the blood - thus reducing the need for insulin shots in diabetics.An "exercise drug" would turn on all AMP-activated kinase in the body and trick the body into thinking it was exercising. "Exercise stimulates AMP-activated kinase, so manipulation of this molecule may lead to getting the benefits of exercise without exercising," Johnson said. The findings were published in the October issue of Genetics and available online now. (ANI)
How bilinguals switch between languages
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Compound in Mediterranean diet makes cancer cells 'mortal'
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Molecular trigger for onset of Alzheimer's pinpointed
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Blind people use echo technique to locate objects just like bats
May 21, 2:25 pm
Washington, May 21 (ANI): Researchers from the University of Southampton have shown that blind and visually impaired people have the potential to use echolocation, similar to that used by bats and dolphins, to determine the location of an object.
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