Item #12
Synthetic
Antioxidants Key to Fighting Diabetes
A
synthetic antioxidant that can delay and prevent the onset of
autoimmune diabetes in mice could be a useful tool against diabetes ,
scientists report this week.
Researchers
at the National Jewish Medical and Research Center report that the
antioxidant protected insulin-producing beta cells from lethal oxygen
radicals generated in diabetes. The synthetic antioxidant also blocked
the ability of the immune system to recognize beta cells, the target
of the autoimmune attack in diabetes.
The
findings, published in the February issue of Diabetes, suggest that
antioxidants may not only be useful against diabetes but also other
autoimmune diseases and organ-transplant rejections.
“These
data show that antioxidants protect against diabetes on two fronts.
They not only mop up destructive oxygen radicals, but also alter the
immune response,” said
James Crapo, M.D., co-author and Chairman of the Department of
Medicine at National Jewish.
“That
suggests the intriguing possibility that we might one day treat a
variety of autoimmune diseases by altering the oxidant/antioxidant
balance of immune system.”
In
autoimmune, or type 1, diabetes, the immune system mistakenly
recognises beta cells as foreign invaders and initiates an attack
against them. During the attack, inflammatory cells release oxygen
radicals that damage beta cells and eventually cause them to die. As
increasing numbers of beta cells are destroyed, the body produces less
and less insulin, leading to diabetes. Approximately 1 million people
in the U.S. have type 1 diabetes, and about 30,000 new cases are
diagnosed each year.
The
researchers used a synthetic catalytic antioxidant developed several
years earlier by Dr. Crapo and his colleagues, and now licensed by
Incara Pharmaceuticals Corporation. The antioxidant, dubbed AEOL
10113, mimics the naturally occurring antioxidant superoxide
dismutase, but is effective against a wider range of antioxidants and
lasts longer in the body.
The
researchers injected AEOL 10113 into 10 mice one day before
transplanting T cells that cause diabetes. Following the transplant,
they gave the mice the antioxidant four more times, the last on day 9.
All five control mice became diabetic by day 13. None of the mice
treated with AEOL 10113 showed any signs of diabetes until day 21, and
half remained diabetes-free after four weeks.
“We
were surprised and pleased that the mice remained healthy for almost
two weeks after the antioxidant treatments ended,”
said co-author Jon Piganelli, an immunologist who was working at the
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center when he did the work. “That
suggested to us that the antioxidant had altered the cells of the
immune system.”
Subsequent
experiments indicated that the antioxidant could prevent the immune
system from recognising specific antigens, molecules that normally
trigger an immune response. This suggests that the antioxidant could
be used in combination with specific antigens to treat not only
diabetes, but other autoimmune diseases. Additional experiments will
have to be done to prove the safety and efficacy of the antioxidant in
animals before human trials could begin.
“Obviously
we have a long way to go,”
said Dr. Crapo. “But we believe that these findings have opened a
very promising new line of research.” Source: National Jewish
Medical and Research Center.
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