Possible cures routinely pop up only to fade from view, their benefits never quite surpassing the simple efficacy of an insulin injection.
Lev Dolgachov/Thinkstock
Type 1 diabetes is a discouraging disease. Despite the availability of synthetic insulin and increasingly sophisticated monitoring technology, its still a condition that requires incessant vigilance: Diabetics must constantly track their blood sugar levels and carefully use that information to calibrate drug doses. Even if you manage to do all of that well, bad days remain almost inevitable. Take too much insulin, and you can spiral into a hypoglycemic delirium. Take too little, and your glucose levels will rise, filling the body with dangerous levels of ketones.
Less immediately frustratingbut no less familiar for diabeticsis the state of diabetes research. Possible cures routinely pop up only to fade from view, their benefits never quite surpassing the simple efficacy of an insulin injection. More recently, though, the field of synthetic biologya hybrid discipline that aims to construct or redesign biological components and systemshas shown the potential to produce a novel set of treatments. The solutions remain speculative, but they do offer cautious reasons for hope.
Type 1 diabetes, in theory, should be relatively easy to solve. That has been the mantra of researchers for the last 30 years. And I still take insulin every day.
John Glass, a researcher working on one such new effort, knows how maddening false hope can be, having lived with the disease for decades. Type 1 diabetes, in theory, should be relatively easy to solve, he told me over the phone. That has been the mantra of type 1 diabetes researchers for the last 30 years. And I still take insulin every day.
I had originally called Glass, a synthetic biologist with the J. Craig Venter Institute, in the hopes of better understanding how his burgeoning field was contributing to the search for a cure. Id been drawn to the topic through a seemingly promising synthetic biology study led by researchers at ETH Zurich and East China Normal University. I came away from our call fascinated instead by the promise of new research that Glass himself has recently begun to pursue. He believes it might be possible to re-engineer the genomes of skin bacteria in ways that would allow them to perform some of the functions that diabetics bodies no longer can. Whether or not that ultimately works, it exemplifies the promise of synthetic biology to provide a way around problems that have long been insurmountable for researchers.
My own interest in this topic is far from academic. Im a type 1 diabetic, and I read the study I called Glass aboutdauntingly titled -CellMimetic Designer Cells Provide Closed-Loop Glycemic Controlfrom a hospital bed where Id regained consciousness after a sudden and unexpected seizure, likely brought on by a low blood sugar episode. Though my own condition is generally well-managed, I cant help but long for a better way.
To understand the promise of the Closed Loop paper, you first have to understand what Type 1 diabetes entails. At core, its an autoimmune disease, one that results from a biological glitch that leads the body to attack the insulin-producing beta cells of its own pancreas. Beta cellsthe -cells of the papers titleserve two primary functions in a healthy organism: First, they detect blood glucose levels within the body. Second, when those levels begin to rise, the cells secrete insulin. The diabetic autoimmune assault kills off the beta cells, leaving the body with no way to process the carbohydrates it consumes.
In essence, the researchers behind this paper sought to re-engineer human embryonic kidney cells to mimic the functions of the pancreatic beta cells (the mimetic of the papers title) that immune systems of those with diabetes destroy. They then implanted these designer cells into diabetic mice, where, according to the paper, they successfully and autonomously stabilized their hosts blood sugar levels.
Your Cheat-Sheet Guide to Synthetic Biology
What Exactly Is Synthetic Biology? Its Complicated.
Can You Patent an Organism? The Synthetic Biology Community Is Divided.
The U.S. Regulations for Biotechnology Are Woefully Out of Date
Synthetic Biology and Queer Theory Are Cutting Down the Tree of Life You Learned About in School
Being Skeptical About Biotechnology Doesnt Make You Anti-Science
Can Synthetic Biology Finally Cure Diabetes?
How the U.S. Militarys Synthetic Biology Initiatives Could Change the Entire Research Field
Its the autonomous, or closed loop, quality thats most exciting hereoffering the potential to stabilize the body without regular injections and blood sugar checks. True closed-loops recreate the healthy bodys natural processes, much as these modified kidney cells seem to do by automatically distributing insulin in response to blood sugar fluctuations. Such systems have long been the holy grail for diabetic researchers, since they would allow diabetics to go about their liveseating and exercising as they wantedwithout having to check glucose readings and juggle dosing regimens.
Medical technologists have long been at work on devices that would achieve similar results by more mechanical means: MedTronic recently received FDA approval for what it calls a closed loop combination of a digital glucose sensor and an insulin pump that it plans to roll out later this year. Its a potentially powerful device, but it still demands substantial involvement from the user, who must feed it information about carbohydrate intake, regularly recalibrate the sensor, and, of course, attach the sensors and insulin pump to their body. By comparison, synthetic biology promises a truly hands-off solution, one that wouldat least in theorysimply work.
I dont want to overstate things here. While projects working to synthesize replacements for beta cells are impressive (and have produced exciting results elsewhere), they still exhibit a fundamental problem: the diabetic bodys seemingly irreversible autoimmune response. Because the mimetic replacements resemble natural beta cells, the immune system still recognizes them as targets and eventually kills them off. Even if they work under experimental conditions for a few weeks, their effectiveness fades in time, as Glass and other researchers explained to me. Its not immediately obvious how or if the new research would overcome that hurdle, and the researchers did not respond to requests for comment.
Chad Cowan, director of the diabetes program at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, told me that the issue has been extremely difficult to resolve. Over the course of the last two years, weve tried to talk to every immunologist and every person who works on autoimmunity, particularly if they have any focus on type 1 diabetes, he said. Our overall assessment is that there isnt an easy solution, at least in terms of modulating the immune system. Various attempts to work around the immune systems response, he said, havent done more than slightly ameliorate the disease in experimental mice or clinical trials. A Californian company called ViaCyte thinks it has found a possible solution, sheathing cells in what it calls a retrievable and immune-protective encapsulation medical device. But the results of that approach remain uncertain.
Its here that the real promise of Glass proposal reveals itself: He thinks hes found a workaround for the autoimmune problem, one that would allow the body to autonomously produce insulin as needed and without risk of disruption.
Glass own professional involvement in the field began a few years ago when Alberto Hayek, a diabetes researcher and emeritus professor from University of CaliforniaSan Diego, reached out. Hayek was curious about a project Glass had worked on in 2010, in which JCVI had created a fully synthetic bacterial organism. Wondering if the same techniques might be applicable elsewhere, Hayek called Glass attention to the work of one of his UCSD colleagues, a dermatologist named Richard Gallo, who discovered a beneficial bacteria living deep in the layers of our skin that seem to be overlooked by the immune system. Would it be possibleGlass says Hayek wonderedto harvest and modify these microbes so that they function like beta cells. Instead of making new beta cells, which the body would simply reject, they would be taking something that the body still accepts and lead it to act like a beta cell.
It seemed feasible to Glass. The idea is that hed introduce new features to the bacteria, genetically re-engineering them so that theyd be able to perform the feats that diabetics bodies no longer can. He might, as he explained to me, be able to take those cells from any given person [and] put in the machinery that would allow those cells now to sense blood glucose, there in and amongst the capillaries that are in our skin. And since the immune system usually passes over these particular microbes, it might just let the newly engineered cells go about their business. Further, he said, We also know that if you put bacteria on your skin, they very quickly make it into the deep layers, meaning it could potentially be delivered via a nonintrusive application, such as personalized skin cream.
At present, Glass work is still in its earliest stages. He and his colleagues at JCVI are currently seeking funding to conduct experiments in mice. He also freely acknowledges that the re-engineered microbes might not work in practice. For one, bacteria arent great at building the structures that constitute insulin, which means Glass and his team would have to get them to produce an experimental variant. Then, of course, there are the safety concerns: They need to build a kill switch into the engineered bacteria, lest they start producing dangerously excessive amounts of the hormone. On top of that, its also unclear how many microbes they would need to apply and whether they can make enough to do the job. Its even possible, Cowan said, that the T-cells in some diabetics would attack the modified insulin.
As any longtime diabetic will tell you, the most likely outcome is that we simply wont see results soon, if ever. Even when you have a good, workable idea, the process of medical science tends to be slow: According to Cowan, it took 15 years just to get from the idea of making beta cells out of stem cells to actually producing them.
Nevertheless, Glass enthusiasmboth for synthetic biologys broader role in diabetes research and for his own work in the fieldis infectious. When I first got into science, I used to go to seminars about trying to solve diabetes. And I found them so depressing. I was convinced I was not going to live to be 30, he says. Hes survivedas have I and so many other diabeticsthanks to powerful, but largely incremental steps forward in medical technology. Now, he thinks, he may be ready to help us make a larger leap.
Im convinced that Ive reached the point in my career where I have just the right set of skills to take this completely different approach to the problem, he told me. And Im thrilled about it.
This article is part of the synthetic biology installment of Futurography, a series in which Future Tense introduces readers to the technologies that will define tomorrow. Each month, well choose a new technology and break it down. Future Tense is a collaboration among Arizona State University, New America, and Slate.
Original post:
Can Synthetic Biology Finally Cure Diabetes? - Slate Magazine
- Whats Next in Diabetes Care: Innovations and Insights - Beyond Type 1 - April 14th, 2025
- Common Additive Combos in Food And Drinks May Raise Risk of Type 2 Diabetes - ScienceAlert - April 14th, 2025
- Explained: What is Type-5 diabetes? Why the malnutrition-induced condition is back? - Sambad English - April 14th, 2025
- A comprehensive review on the implications of Yogic/ Sattvic diet in reducing inflammation in type 2 diabetes - Nature - April 14th, 2025
- These Food Additives Could Increase Your Risk of Diabetes - VICE - April 14th, 2025
- How Common Food Additives are Linked to Type-2 Diabetes - Discover Magazine - April 14th, 2025
- A conversation about living with Pompe disease and diabetes - Pompe Disease News - April 14th, 2025
- Diabetes in pregnant mothers linked to ADHD and autism risk in children - The Independent - April 14th, 2025
- Study explores potential increased risk between diabetes during pregnancy and ADHD, autism - CBS News - April 14th, 2025
- Possible link between eating food additives and diabetes - KSNV - April 14th, 2025
- GLP-1s Eyed as Key to Managing T1D With Obesity - Medscape - April 14th, 2025
- Want to Lower Your Diabetes Risk? This Kind of Exercise Could Help, Recent Study Says - EatingWell - April 14th, 2025
- Cdk5 inhibitor shows anti-diabetic and neuroprotective effects in type 2 diabetes - BioWorld MedTech - April 14th, 2025
- Researchers uncover a link to autismand it isnt vaccines - Fortune - April 14th, 2025
- Dexcom G7 15 Day Receives FDA Clearance: the Longest Lasting Wearable and Most Accurate CGM System - Dexcom - April 14th, 2025
- Heart of the Valley: Hidalgo County man managing his diabetes after losing 60 pounds - KRGV - April 14th, 2025
- Tandem Diabetes Care (TNDM) Moves 7.6% Higher: Will This Strength Last? - Yahoo Finance - April 14th, 2025
- FGCU Beach Volleyball's Jaci Carpenter not allowing Type 1 diabetes to get in the way - WBBH - April 14th, 2025
- Biomarkers of Inflammation, Oxidative Stress, and Endothelial Dysfunction in Early Detection of Diabetic Foot Ulcers - Cureus - April 14th, 2025
- Unstable Blood Sugar Levels Tied to Higher Erectile Dysfunction Risk in Men with Type 2 Diabetes: Study - Medical Dialogues - April 14th, 2025
- This 'itchy' symptom is an early sign of diabetes that people often miss; know more about it - The Times of India - February 7th, 2025
- Diabetes and obesity drugs fuel Eli Lilly profit in the final quarter of 2024 - ABC News - February 7th, 2025
- Incidence of type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome by Occupation 10-Year follow-up of the Gutenberg Health Study - BMC Public Health - February 7th, 2025
- Abbotts Above the Bias Film Reveals Misconceptions Can Impact Diabetes Care - MultiVu - February 7th, 2025
- Q&A: Diabetes care for the aging population in the digital age - Medical Xpress - February 7th, 2025
- The relationship between oxLDL, sLOX-1, PCSK9 and carotid intima-media thickness in patients with prediabetes and type 2 diabetes - Nature.com - February 7th, 2025
- Nanoparticle Therapy has Potential to Reprogram the Immune System in Type 1 Diabetes - Managed Healthcare Executive - February 7th, 2025
- Muscle quality index is correlated with insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus: a cross-sectional population-based study - BMC Public Health - February 7th, 2025
- Assessing type-2 diabetes risk based on the Indian diabetes risk score among adults aged 45 and above in India - Nature.com - February 7th, 2025
- Single-cell atlas of human pancreatic islet and acinar endothelial cells in health and diabetes - Nature.com - February 7th, 2025
- Sugary Drinks Fuel Millions of Diabetes and CVD Cases - Medscape - February 7th, 2025
- 1 in 5 UK adults estimated to have diabetes in new record high - Euronews - February 7th, 2025
- New, increasingly widely used diabetes medication may have additional health benefits for older adults - Medical Xpress - February 7th, 2025
- Patients using diabetes apps can miss critical alerts. Heres how to make sure youre getting them - Canon City Daily Record - February 7th, 2025
- Diabetes and obesity drugs fuel Eli Lilly profit in the final quarter of 2024 - News-Press Now - February 7th, 2025
- Does wearing a continuous glucose monitor help people without diabetes? We asked experts. - Popular Science - February 7th, 2025
- What is prediabetes and what can you do to stop it? - The Independent - February 7th, 2025
- Diabetes symptoms: 6 high blood sugar warning signs that show on hand and feet - India.com - February 7th, 2025
- The #1 Habit for Better Heart Health If You Have Diabetes, According to Experts - EatingWell - February 7th, 2025
- 'Fix Broken Food System!' Government Urged as Study Says 1 in 5 Brits Affected by Diabetes - Men's Health UK - February 7th, 2025
- World Diabetes Day 2024 - World Health Organization (WHO) - December 6th, 2024
- The WHO Global Diabetes Compact - December 6th, 2024
- Diabetes - World Health Organization (WHO) - December 6th, 2024
- Kumamoto University researchers discover groundbreaking antidiabetic compound - EurekAlert - December 6th, 2024
- Med's David Kaelber comments on GLP-1 agonists, which provide benefits like managing diabetes and weight loss - The Daily | Case Western Reserve... - December 6th, 2024
- Jordan Chiles Is On a Mission To Raise Awareness for Early Type 1 Diabetes Screening - Verywell Health - December 6th, 2024
- There's A Tasty Food That May Reduce Your Risk Of Developing Type 2 Diabetes, Study Shows - HuffPost - December 6th, 2024
- Empagliflozin Linked to Lower Risk of Diabetic Retinopathy Progression - Medpage Today - December 6th, 2024
- GLP-1 Medications Associated with Reduced Likelihood of Dementia Compared to Other Diabetic Meds - Epic Research - December 6th, 2024
- Sanders Slams Greed That Led to Surge in Obesity, Diabetes in US - The Well News - December 6th, 2024
- Eli Lilly to Expand Facility to Meet Demand for Diabetes, Obesity Treatments - The Wall Street Journal - December 6th, 2024
- New Study Teases Out Chocolate and Diabetes Connection - Medpage Today - December 6th, 2024
- Diabetes tool turned wellness trend: Is a glucose monitor right for you? - KARE11.com - December 6th, 2024
- Reporter doesnt have diabetes but wore a glucose monitor anyway. Here's what she learned - CNN - December 6th, 2024
- Lilly's Zepbound (tirzepatide) superior to Wegovy (semaglutide) in head-to-head trial showing an average weight loss of 20.2% vs. 13.7% - Investors |... - December 6th, 2024
- I dont have diabetes, but I wore a glucose monitor for six weeks. Heres what I learned about food (and anxiety) - CNN - December 6th, 2024
- Higher niacin levels linked to lower cardiovascular risk, but not in those with diabetes - Healio - December 6th, 2024
- This Type Of Chocolate Could Reduce Type 2 Diabetes Risk By 21% - NDTV - December 6th, 2024
- New Study Links Safer BPA Alternatives to Obesity, Diabetes, and Hormone Disruption - SciTechDaily - December 6th, 2024
- Turns Out Dark Chocolate Has a Health Benefit That's Shockingly GreatAnd Totally Unexpected - Well+Good - December 6th, 2024
- Global report on diabetes - World Health Organization (WHO) - October 22nd, 2024
- Ultra-processed food may be particularly harmful for people with diabetes, scientists warn - The Independent - October 22nd, 2024
- New drugs may be able to treat multiple problems beyond diabetes - The Straits Times - October 22nd, 2024
- Best Fruits for Diabetes (and What To Avoid) - Health Essentials - October 22nd, 2024
- Cutting Sugar May Reduce Your Diabetes, Stroke, and Depression Risk - Healthline - October 22nd, 2024
- Can Diabetes Care Teams Improve Patient Outcomes and Value? - Medscape - October 22nd, 2024
- Oral Semaglutide Reduces MACE Risk in People With Type 2 Diabetes and CVD - MD Magazine - October 22nd, 2024
- High expression of CNOT6L contributes to the negative development of type 2 diabetes - Nature.com - October 22nd, 2024
- Recent Advances and Therapeutic Benefits of Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 (GLP-1) Agonists in the Management of Type 2 Diabetes and Associated Metabolic... - October 22nd, 2024
- Dental teams could detect undiagnosed diabetes in more than one million people with new care pathway - Nature.com - October 22nd, 2024
- Groundbreaking Innovations in Diabetes Care: Highlights from the 2024 Diabetes Technology Meeting - Beyond Type 1 - October 22nd, 2024
- COVID-19 linked to type 2 diabetes onset in children - Medical Xpress - October 22nd, 2024
- The effect of adding pancreatin to standard otilinium bromide and simethicone treatment in type 2 diabetes mellitus patients with irritable bowel... - October 22nd, 2024
- Does microdosing Ozempic work? What experts are saying about the diabetes drug also used for weight loss - Medical Xpress - October 22nd, 2024
- The Link between GLP-1 Drugs and Diabetic Retinopathy Is Not So Clear | AAO 2024 - Managed Healthcare Executive - October 22nd, 2024
- The overexpression of human amylin in pancreatic cells facilitate the appearance of amylin aggregates in the kidney contributing to diabetic... - October 22nd, 2024
- RNAO releases updated guidelines for diabetic foot ulcer care - Benefits and Pensions Monitor - October 22nd, 2024
- COVID-19 raises the risk of type 2 diabetes in children, study reveals - News-Medical.Net - October 22nd, 2024
- Semaglutide: What impact does it really have on heart health? - Medical News Today - October 22nd, 2024
- Glucose monitors for diabetes have finally been funded but a chronic workforce shortage will limit the benefits - The Conversation - October 22nd, 2024