University of Minnesota Receives $40 Million for Type 1 Diabetes Research
Posted on: Thursday, 11 December 2008, 11:30 CST
The gift is the second largest in the history of the University and the
second largest by an individual or family foundation to diabetes research in
"We have the capacity to cure this devastating disease and help people
enjoy a happy and productive life no longer constrained by diabetes and
constant fears and worries," said
Type 1 diabetes is a crippling and relentless disease. It occurs in children and young adults when the immune system mistakenly destroys all insulin-producing islet beta cells in the pancreas. To stay alive and to regulate their blood sugar, patients rely on multiple daily blood sugar measurements and insulin injections. Even with rigorous disease management, they are at risk of developing deadly complications.
"This transformative gift enables some of the world's best minds to
aggressively pursue a cure for a disease impacting millions of people
worldwide," said University president
Through pioneering work by researchers from the newly named Schulze Diabetes Institute, the Stem Cell Institute, the Center for Translational Medicine and other critical University resources, three promising conceptual cures have been identified: human islet transplantation, pig islet transplantation and stem cell-derived islet cells. The Schulze gift will focus on specific efforts to implement these cures.
"The scientists, especially Drs. Hering, Firpo and Blazar and their teams
at the University have the passion, determination, experience and knowledge to
find a cure for type 1 diabetes," said
The collaborative effort to advance these cures will be led by Hering and
Researchers have had success reversing diabetes with human islet cell
transplants, but because of the severe shortage of donor organs, and the
challenges of immunosuppression, few have benefited from this experimental
treatment.
A team led by
The research team has also successfully reversed diabetes in animal models using pig islet cells and has established a relationship with Spring Point Project, a nonprofit organization that raises medical-grade pigs to supply islets for transplantation. The researchers are currently developing a cell therapy to offset immunosuppression issues related to transplant.
Firpo is investigating the reprogramming of adult skin cells into stem cells that can generate islet cells. She also uses stem cells to study the development of the cells and tissues involved with the diabetes, with the hope that better understanding may lead to discoveries that would enable islet cell regeneration or prevent the islet cells from being destroyed in the first place.
"This most generous gift positions us to collaborate on the unprecedented and real opportunities that exist today in stem cell, transplantation and immunology research. These synergies will help us find the best cure faster. Stem cells provide another source of islets for transplantation and offer us tremendous potential to conquer this complicated disease," said Firpo.
Internal and external advisory boards will provide insight, feedback and oversight throughout the process. Researchers will also be collaborating with partners from other academic institutions and industry partners.
Founded in 1939, the Minnesota Medical Foundation raises millions of
dollars annually for health-related research, education and service at the
The Richard M. Schulze Family Foundation, established in 2004, is
committed to improving the lives of families and children in
Contact:
SOURCE
Source: PR Newswire
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