SPACE GROWN INSULIN MAY LEAD TO BIG CHANGES FOR DIABETICS
Diabetic patients may someday reduce their insulin injections and lead more normal lives because of new insights gained through innovative space research in which the largest insulin crystals ever studied were grown on the Space Shuttle.
Results from a 1994 insulin crystal growth
experiment in space are leading to a new understanding of diabetes -- a
hormone deficiency disease. This has the potential to significantly
reduce expensive treatments, since treatment of diabetes accounts
for one-seventh of the nation's health care
costs. Sixteen million Americans suffer from hormone deficiency diseases
such as diabetes, hepatic failure, hemophilia, Parkinson's and Huntington
diseases.
"The space-grown insulin crystals have provided us new, never-before-seen information," said Dr. G. David Smith, scientist at Hauptman-Woodward Medical Research Institute, Buffalo, NY. "As a result, we now have a much more detailed picture of insulin,"Smith said.
Because of the increase in crystal size, Smith's team is able to study in more detail the delicate balance of the insulin molecule. Natural insulin molecules hold together and gradually release into the human body. With some of the new and unexpected findings, researchers may be able to improve how insulin is released from its inactive-stored state to its active state. This could greatly improve the quality-of-life of people on insulin therapy by cutting down on the number of injections they have to take.
"This new information can be used in the development of a new therapeutic insulin treatment for the control of diabetes," said Smith.
Hauptman-Woodward is partnering with the Center for Macromolecular Crystallography, a NASA Commercial Space Center in Birmingham, AL.
"We are doing crystal growth experiments in the near- weightlessness of space that really tell the story of how insulin works and give us clues of how, in the long run, to defeat diabetes," said Dr. Marianna M. Long, associate director of the center located at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
Insulin is one of the most important hormones
in the human body because it regulates the body's blood sugar levels.
In people with diabetes, insulin is not produced in sufficient
quantity, nor regulated properly. This
metabolism disorder impairs the body's ability to use digested food for
growth andenergy.
Like many chemicals in the body, the three-dimensional
structure of insulin is extremely complex. The intricate, blueprint-like
arrangement of atoms within the insulin molecule
determines how well the hormone interacts
within the body. When grown on the ground, insulin crystals do not
grow as large or as ordered as researchers desire -- obscuring the blueprint
of the insulin molecules.
The center in Birmingham is one of NASA's 10
Commercial Space Centers managed by the Space Product Development Office
within the Microgravity Research Program Office at NASA's Marshall Space
Flight Center in Huntsville, AL. Each center represents a NASA
partnership with industry and academia, pursuing
product-oriented research in areas such as biotechnology, agriculture and
materials. Unique research opportunities of the space environment
are made available to encourage private industries to exploit the benefits
of space-based research to develop new products or services.
NASA research has furthered the understanding of many diseases, including AIDS, heart disease, cancer, respiratory syncytial virus, sickle cell anemia, hepatitis and rheumatoid arthritis.
Copyright © 1999 Kathy Miles and Charles F. Peters II