http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/02/130207114422.htm

Type 1 Diabetes Cured in Dogs, Study Suggests

Feb. 7, 2013 — Researchers from the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (UAB), led by Fàtima Bosch, have shown for the first time that it is possible to cure diabetes in large animals with a single session of gene therapy. As published this week in Diabetes, the principal journal for research on the disease, after a single gene therapy session, the dogs recover their health and no longer show symptoms of the disease. In some cases, monitoring continued for over four years, with no recurrence of symptoms.

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Health & Medicine
•Diabetes
•Gene Therapy
•Personalized Medicine
•Genes
•Diseases and Conditions
•Hormone Disorders

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•Blood sugar
•Vector (biology)
•Diabetes mellitus type 2
•Hyperglycemia

The therapy is minimally invasive. It consists of a single session of various injections in the animal's rear legs using simple needles that are commonly used in cosmetic treatments. These injections introduce gene therapy vectors, with a dual objective: to express the insulin gene, on the one hand, and that of glucokinase, on the other. Glucokinase is an enzyme that regulates the uptake of glucose from the blood. When both genes act simultaneously they function as a "glucose sensor," which automatically regulates the uptake of glucose from the blood, thus reducing diabetic hyperglycemia (the excess of blood sugar associated with the disease).

As Fàtima Bosch, the head researcher, points out, "this study is the first to demonstrate a long-term cure for diabetes in a large animal model using gene therapy."

This same research group had already tested this type of therapy on mice, but the excellent results obtained for the first time with large animals lays the foundations for the clinical translation of this gene therapy approach to veterinary medicine and eventually to diabetic patients.

The study was led by the head of the UAB's Centre for Animal Biotechnology and Gene Therapy (CBATEG) Fàtima Bosch, and involved the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology of the UAB, the Department of Medicine and Animal Surgery of the UAB, the Faculty of Veterinary Science of the UAB, the Department of Animal Health and Anatomy of the UAB, the Spanish Biomedical Research Centre in Diabetes and Associated Metabolic Disorders (CIBERDEM), the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (USA) and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute of Philadelphia (USA).

A safe and efficacious gene therapy

The study provides ample data showing the safety of gene therapy mediated by adeno-associated vectors (AAV) in diabetic dogs. The therapy has proved to be safe and efficacious: it is based on the transfer of two genes to the muscle of adult animals using a new generation of very safe vectors known as adeno-associated vectors. These vectors, derived from non-pathogenic viruses, are widely used in gene therapy and have been successful in treating several diseases.

In fact, the first gene therapy medicine ever approved by the European Medicines Agency, named Glybera®, makes use of adeno-associated vectors to treat a metabolic disease caused by a deficiency of lipoprotein lipase and the resulting accumulation of triglycerides in the blood.

Long-term control of the disease

Dogs treated with a single administration of gene therapy showed good glucose control at all times, both when fasting and when fed, improving on that of dogs given daily insulin injections, and with no episodes of hypoglycemia, even after exercise. Furthermore, the dogs treated with adeno-associated vectors improved their body weight and had not developed secondary complications four years after the treatment.

The study is the first to report optimal long-term control of diabetes in large animals. This had never before been achieved with any other innovative therapies for diabetes. The study is also the first to report that a single administration of genes to diabetic dogs is able to maintain normoglycemia over the long term (more than 4 years). As well as achieving normoglycemia, the dogs had normal levels of glycosylated proteins and developed no secondary complications of diabetes after more than 4 years with the disease.

Application in diabetic patients

There have been multiple clinical trials in which AAV vectors have been introduced into skeletal muscle, so the strategy reported in this study is feasible for clinical translation. Future safety and efficacy studies will provide the bases for initiating a clinical veterinary trial of diabetes treatment for companion animals, which will supply key information for eventual trials with humans. In conclusion, this study paves the way for the clinical translation of this approach to gene therapy to veterinary medicine, and eventually to diabetic patients.

Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, via AlphaGalileo.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.

Tags: 1, dogs, gene, therapy, type

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I remember the first time I had read a story about diabetes being cured in mice and how I got my hopes up. After the second or third time I finally realized that research in mice didn't translate well to research in humans. But still, I love hearing this type of news. I'm a parent of a 10 year-old with T1. I think, if I can do a really good job with caring for his diabetes, maybe they will have the cure by the time he is 18 or 20 and maybe then he will never suffer any diabetes-related problems... other than what comes with it every frigging day.

This does make me hopeful. When I was diagnosed in '85 I was told there would be a cure in about 10 years.... A cure in 2023? I wouldn't be too surprised based on research like this :)

Thanks so much for the positive notes and perspectives. Miracles do happen. They've happened in my life many times so far. I think that we can visualize health and healing and that it can happen. If you can think it, then it's possible. Meditation is one of my personal attempts at maintaining sanity and a positive perspective. Smiling and laughter also help me.

WOOF, WOOF, WOOF....
(stuart drooling)

This is interesting news, but it is just too vauge for me to draw any conclusions, except this is a novel proof of concept.

Hope mixed with a healthy dose of cynicism. There have been a number of gene therapy successes recently. The more approaches the better.

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