Scientists have 'cured' laboratory mice of mild, diet-induced diabetes by stimulating the production of a particular enzyme.According to researchers, the findings could offer a new approach to diabetes therapy, especially if a drug could be identified that would do the same thing, which in this case was accomplished with genetic manipulation.Increased levels of this enzyme, called fatty acid elongase-5, restored normal function to diseased livers in mice, restored normal levels of blood glucose and insulin, and effectively corrected the risk factors incurred with diet-induced diabetes."This effect was fairly remarkable and not anticipated," said Donald Jump at Oregon State University. "It doesn't provide a therapy yet, but could be fairly important if we can find a drug to raise levels of this enzyme. "There are already some drugs on the market that do this to a point, and further research in the field would be merited," he added.The studies were done on a family of enzymes called "fatty acid elongases," which have been known of for decades. In research on diet-induced obesity and diabetes, enzyme conversion pathways were studied, and found that elongase-5 was often impaired in mice with elevated insulin levels and diet-induced obesity.The scientists used an established system, based on a recombinant adenovirus, to import the gene responsible for production of elongase-5 into the livers of obese, diabetic mice. When this 'delivery system' began to function and the mice produced higher levels of the enzyme, their diet-induced liver defects and elevated blood sugar disappeared."The use of a genetic delivery system such as this was functional, but it may not be a permanent solution," Jump said. "For human therapy, it would be better to find a drug that could accomplish the same thing, and that may be possible. There are already drugs on the market, such as some fibrate drugs, that induce higher levels of elongase-5 to some extent."The potential for raising levels of elongase-5 would be a new, specific and targeted approach to diabetes therapy, he said. "These studies establish a link between fatty acid elongation and hepatic glucose and triglyceride metabolism," the researchers said.The study was published in the Journal of Lipid Research.

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