OTTAWA, Dec. 15 (Xinhua) -- Canadian scientists have
identified the role of pain nerves in the cells that produce insulin and
successfully prevented and reversed diabetes in mice, a major breakthrough in
the research of Type 1 diabetes.
Scientists have always believe that Type 1 diabetes
occurs after a severe miscue by the immune system causes insulin-producing cells
in the pancreas to be destroyed. Now Canadian-led research suggests immune cells
are not the only culprits in developing the disease --the nervous system also
plays a pivotal role, Canadian Television (CTV) reported Friday.
With Type 1 diabetes, the destruction of the islet
cells in the pancreas leaves the body without insulin to regulate the metabolism
of blood glucose, or sugar. The disease, can lead to severe complications even
with daily insulin injections, including blindness, limb amputation and kidney
failure.
In studies of laboratory mice specially bred to be
made susceptible to Type 1 diabetes, researchers at the Hospital for Sick
Children and the University of Calgary discovered that a control circuit exists
between insulin-producing cells and their associated sensory, or pain-related
nerves, CTV reported.
It turns out that this control circuit is necessary
to retain the health and normal function of islet cells, said principal
investigator Dr. Michael Dosch, an immunologist at Sick Kids Hospital.
"What we really have discovered is that the immune
system is under much closer control by the nervous system than we thought, that
this control to a large extent involves sensory nerves,'' said Dosch, explaining
that such nerves are the same kind that signal the brain to send out pain
messages when an ankle is broken or a finger is burned on a hot stove.
As part of their studies, the scientists knocked out
specific pain-related nerve cells in newborn lab mice. These nerve cells secrete
a chemical called "substance P," which is known to amplify pain signals as well
as boosting inflammation.
The mice were "perfectly fine . . . except that
instead of getting diabetes 90 per cent (of the time), they got none or very
little," said Dosch. "Not only did they not get diabetes, but their pancreas was
clean -- there was no inflammation, no nasties that make the disease in the
pancreas."
In other words, a dysfunctional immune response is
not the only thing needed to get diabetes -- the nerve cells are also critical,
he said.
In another experiment, the researchers injected
substance P into mice whose islet cells were already inflamed and on the way to
being destroyed. By the next day, the inflammation in the animals' pancreatic
islets had disappeared.
"That was our first shock. To make an islet clean
that's fully inflamed, that's hard," said Dosch.
While the team is not about to start injecting humans
with substance P, they are planning a study of people with a family history of
type 1 diabetes to test for abnormalities in pain sensitivity, which could point
to a higher risk for developing the disease.
Diabetics often suffer from peripheral neuropathy, a
condition in the extremities experienced as numbness or as pain described as
burning or "pins and needles." The research suggests that neuropathy is not
merely a result of diabetes but could be related to the nervous system's role in
the whole disease process, Dosch hypothesized.
The sensitivity study is just the first step, he
said. "The ultimate goal is to see if substance P would work. If we find that
indeed humans and (diabetes-prone) mice are comparable in this respect, then we
will be very quick into clinical trials because it's not a toxic trial, it's
easy to do."
"In families with the disease where we have good
tools, we can identify kids that are at risk and are in progression to disease
development. We could step in early and prevent the whole thing from going to
completion into overt diabetes. And that would be a great thing."
Commenting on the paper, which appears in Friday's
edition of the scientific journal Cell, immunologist Terry Delovitch said the
work illustrates the importance of not viewing one system of the body in
isolation.
"It's an excellent example of system biology, where
different systems interact and cross-regulate each other's activity," said
Delovitch, a specialist in the immune system and diabetes at the Robarts
Research Institute in Ontario.