AI Article Synopsis

  • Diabetes is a complex disease causing high blood sugar levels that can harm various organs, and treating it with insulin can lead to dangerous low blood sugar episodes.
  • Researchers have developed a gene therapy technique to manage diabetes by co-expressing insulin and glucokinase genes in muscle tissue, which has shown success in large diabetic animals using viral vectors.
  • A long-term study (about 8 years) on diabetic dogs demonstrated effective blood sugar control without additional insulin, improved metabolic health indicators, and stable gene expression in muscle tissue, highlighting the therapy's safety and efficacy as the animals age.

Article Abstract

Diabetes is a complex metabolic disease that exposes patients to the deleterious effects of hyperglycemia on various organs. Achievement of normoglycemia with exogenous insulin treatment requires the use of high doses of hormone, which increases the risk of life-threatening hypoglycemic episodes. We developed a gene therapy approach to control diabetic hyperglycemia based on co-expression of the insulin and glucokinase genes in skeletal muscle. Previous studies proved the feasibility of gene delivery to large diabetic animals with adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors. Here, we report the long-term (∼8 years) follow-up after a single administration of therapeutic vectors to diabetic dogs. Successful, multi-year control of glycemia was achieved without the need of supplementation with exogenous insulin. Metabolic correction was demonstrated through normalization of serum levels of fructosamine, triglycerides, and cholesterol and remarkable improvement in the response to an oral glucose challenge. The persistence of vector genomes and therapeutic transgene expression years after vector delivery was documented in multiple samples from treated muscles, which showed normal morphology. Thus, this study demonstrates the long-term efficacy and safety of insulin and glucokinase gene transfer in large animals and especially the ability of the system to respond to the changes in metabolic needs as animals grow older.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5466581PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.omtm.2017.03.008DOI Listing

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