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Diabetes News

Joslin Researchers Reveal Mechanisms Behind A Class of Oral Agents   Used to Treat Type 2 Diabetes

BOSTON, March 9, 2006 (Joslin) - Thiazolidinediones (TZD's) are drugs commonly prescribed to patients  with type 2 diabetes, the most common form of diabetes. Current U.S. Food and  Drug Administration-approved agents are known  as Actos (pioglitazone) and  Avandia (rosiglitazone).  These oral agents improve blood glucose levels  in people with diabetes by  improving insulin action in the body.  While  it is known that these drugs work primarily by binding to a receptor in the  nucleus of cells called Peroxisome Proliferator Activated Receptor-gamma  (PPARg), all of the molecular signaling events important for the drugs to  work are not completely understood.

A new study by researchers at Joslin  Diabetes Center  in Boston  helps to explain how these drugs work. The manuscript appears in the March  edition of the American Diabetes Association's journal Diabetes.

In a clinical research study, Joslin researchers Allison  B. Goldfine, M.D., Sarah Crunkhorn, Ph.D., and Mary-Elizabeth  Patti, M.D., examined muscle and fat tissue from patients with type 2 diabetes before and after they took the drug rosiglitazone. The researchers  found that levels of two proteins called Necdin and E2F4, which are important  in regulating cell replication, are altered in muscle and fat after patients  took the drug for two months. Dr. Goldfine is an Investigator in Joslin's  Section on Cellular and  Molecular Physiology, Assistant Director of Clinical Research at Joslin and  Assistant Professor of Medicine at Harvard  Medical School.  Dr. Patti is Director of Joslin's Genomics Core Lab and also an Investigator  in Cellular and Molecular Physiology and Assistant Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School.  Dr. Crunkhorn is a postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Patti's laboratory.

"Because the proteins are important in regulating the cell cycle, the findings suggest that the thiazolidinediones may work, in part, by altering  the cell differentiation state, or level of cell maturity.   Additionally, the two proteins Necdin and E2F4 may represent new drug targets  that may be useful in the future for treatment of patients with  diabetes," says Dr. Goldfine.

Others who participated in the study include Maura Costello, Hiral Gami,  Edwin J. Landaker, and Jose Jimenez-Chillaron, Ph.D., of  Joslin; Michio  Niinobe, Ph.D., and Kazuaki Yoshikawa, M.D., Ph.D., of  Osaka University,  Japan; David Lo, M.D., Ph.D., of the La Jolla Institute for Allergy and  Immunology, La Jolla, CA; and Amy Warren, Ph.D., of Digital Gene Technologies/Neurome of La Jolla.

Funding for the study was provided by the National Institutes of Health and  generous support from the Iacocca Foundation.

See All March 2006 dLife News Items

Last Modified Date: May 17, 2006


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