Monday, Jun 8, 2026
English News
  • Hyderabad
  • Telangana
  • AP News
  • India
  • World
  • Entertainment
  • Sport
  • Science and Tech
  • Business
  • Rewind
  • ...
    • NRI
    • View Point
    • cartoon
    • My Space
    • Education Today
    • Reviews
    • Property
    • Lifestyle
E-Paper
  • NRI
  • View Point
  • cartoon
  • My Space
  • Reviews
  • Education Today
  • Property
  • Lifestyle
Home | Health | Study Suggests Most Humans Are Vulnerable To Type 2 Diabetes

Study suggests most humans are vulnerable to type 2 diabetes

Past studies from this and other groups have suggested that impaired biosynthesis could be the result of diverse mutations that hinder the foldability of proinsulin.

By ANI
Published Date - 6 November 2020, 03:40 PM
Study suggests most humans are vulnerable to type 2 diabetes
whatsapp facebook twitter telegram

Washington: Scientists have found that insulin has met an evolutionary cul-de-sac, limiting its ability to adapt to obesity and thereby rendering most people vulnerable to Type 2 diabetes.

A recent study from scientists at Indiana University School of Medicine, the University of Michigan and Case Western Reserve University has determined that the sequence of insulin has become entrenched at the edge of impaired production, an intrinsic vulnerability unmasked by rare mutations in the insulin gene causing diabetes in childhood.


The study exploits biophysical concepts and methods to relate protein chemistry to the emerging field of evolutionary medicine.

Insulin is produced by a series of highly specific processes that occur in specialised cells, called beta cells. A key step is the folding of a biosynthetic precursor, called proinsulin, to achieve the hormone’s functional three-dimensional structure.

Past studies from this and other groups have suggested that impaired biosynthesis could be the result of diverse mutations that hinder the foldability of proinsulin.

This group sought to determine if the evolution of insulin in vertebrates–including humans–has encountered a roadblock.

According to the study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the answers are yes and yes.

“Biological processes ordinarily evolve to be robust, and this protects us in the majority of cases from birth defects and diseases,” said Michael Weiss, MD, PhD, Distinguished Professor at IU School of Medicine and lead investigator of the study. “Yet diabetes seems to be an exception.”

Weiss and team looked at a subtle mutation in human insulin in relation to the insulins of other animals, such as cows and porcupines. The mutant human insulin functions within the range of natural variation among animal insulins, and yet this mutation has been excluded by evolution.

The answer to this seeming paradox is that the forbidden mutation selectively blocks the folding of proinsulin and stresses beta cells.

The group discovered that even the slightest variation of the insulin-sequencing process not only impairs insulin folding (and eventual insulin secretion) but also induces cellular stress that leads to beta cell dysfunction and eventually permanent damage.

Weiss, who is also Chair of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and a Precision Health Initiative Professor, said that the study highlights the importance of folding efficiency as a critical but hidden factor in the evolution of insulin over the past 540 million years.

Humans have evolved to be vulnerable to diverse mutations in the insulin gene and that this vulnerability underlies a rare monogenic form of diabetes and provides an evolutionary backdrop to the present obesity-related diabetes pandemic.

National experts agree that this discovery provides key insight to better understanding the development of Type 2 diabetes in adults and children–which both are rising at alarming rates in Indiana and around the world.

“This study is a tour de force unravelling key elements of the structural biology of insulin that affect its synthesis and function. The authors highlight the fact that the insulin gene has been susceptible throughout evolution to mutations that impair insulin’s function or stress beta cells,” said Barbara Kahn, MD, George R. Minot Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School.

“As we approach the 100th anniversary of the discovery of insulin, these elegant observations might lead to a better understanding of the pathogenesis of Type 2 diabetes,” added Kahn.

Director of the University of Chicago Kolver Diabetes Center Louis Philipson, MD, agreed, adding that findings will shape future approaches to research in this area.

“The present findings define a major question for the future: whether harmful misfolding of proinsulin seen in patients bearing INS gene variants may also occur, at lower levels perhaps, but more broadly in the population of human Type 2 diabetes patients around the world,” Philipson said.

Next, the group will work to fully define the sequence determinants that make proinsulin foldable in beta cells. Their hope is that this work will eventually lead to a new category of drugs that mitigate the cellular stress caused by proinsulin’s precarious foldability and target cellular stress in beta cells, thereby preserving insulin-production for high-risk patients.

 

  • Follow Us :
  • Tags
  • Diabetes
  • Hyderabad
  • Hyderabad Today
  • Insulin

Related News

  • Boath MLA Anil Jadhav lays foundation stone to black top road work in Adilabad

    Boath MLA Anil Jadhav lays foundation stone to black top road work in Adilabad

  • Adilabad’s woman turns waste into treasure

    Adilabad’s woman turns waste into treasure

  • Bike-taxi driver allegedly duped after a staged road accident in Medipally

    Bike-taxi driver allegedly duped after a staged road accident in Medipally

  • ‘Insult to democratic values’: Vijayan attacks CM Revanth Reddy on Hydraa row

    ‘Insult to democratic values’: Vijayan attacks CM Revanth Reddy on Hydraa row

Latest News

  • Private school owner from Rajendranagar died by suicide

    35 mins ago
  • Telangana BJP rift out in open as police act in Etala Rajender flexi controversy

    1 hour ago
  • One killed, three injured in road accident in Karimnagar

    1 hour ago
  • Ram Gopal Varma compares ‘Obsession’ with Urmila Matondkar’s ‘Kaun’

    2 hours ago
  • Woman killed in wild elephant attack in Kerala’s Idukki district

    2 hours ago
  • Two die in road accident in Medak

    2 hours ago
  •  Trump dismisses idea that Iran betrays his ‘no new wars’ campaign message

    2 hours ago
  • Adani Ports secures 10-year marine services for Argentina’s 1st LNG export to India

    2 hours ago

company

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

business

  • Subscribe

telangana today

  • Telangana
  • Hyderabad
  • Latest News
  • Entertainment
  • World
  • Andhra Pradesh
  • Science & Tech
  • Sport

follow us

  • Telangana Today Telangana Today
Telangana Today Telangana Today

© Copyrights 2024 TELANGANA PUBLICATIONS PVT. LTD. All rights reserved. Powered by Veegam