|
|
|
...read
the wave™
nanotechnologie,nanoteknologi,nanotecnologia,
nanotehnoloogia, nanoteknologia, nanotechnologija, nanotehnologijas, nanoteknologija,
nanotechnologii, nanotecnologia, nanotehnologijo, nanoteknik
2006
Nano
Medicine...Nano
Medizin...
Nano Geneeskunde...Nano Medicína
www.nanotsunami.com
|
Diabetes research
at UH 'crystalizes' with major finding
New insulin-production method holds promise for
diabetics, impacts other fields
|
| HOUSTON,
May 8, 2006 – A University of Houston professor
and his student have made a major discovery in the
field of diabetes research and diagnosis, finding a
new mechanism for the formation of insulin crystals
in the pancreas. Peter Vekilov, associate professor of chemical engineering,
and Dimitra Georgiou, a recent doctoral graduate
in chemical engineering, both in UH's Cullen College
of Engineering, are behind this breakthrough. Since
insufficient insulin production in the pancreas is
one of the primary causes of adult-onset diabetes,
Vekilov and Georgiou are studying the process of
how insulin is produced in the first place. Understanding
how the body creates this hormone will make it easier
for researchers to discover why some individuals
do not produce enough insulin and thus develop diabetes,
Vekilov said. Specifically, the two have focused
on the creation of insulin crystals, the form in
which insulin is stored in the pancreas before it
is released in the bloodstream. |

Thousands of block-shaped insulin molecules, each
measuring five nanometers, attach themselves to crystals
in special locations known as kinks. Vekilov and
Georgiou found that groups of insulin blocks form
mounds, resulting in the creation of multiple kinks.
These additional kinks provided by the mounds allow
for rapid growth of insulin crystals.
Credit: University of Houston
|
"It is possible that the insulin deficiency happens when the crystals don't
form properly and then part of the insulin that is produced gets destroyed," Vekilov
said.
Proinsulin, a molecular precursor to insulin itself,
is the reason for these crystals. After an insulin
molecule is produced from proinsulin, it attaches to
an insulin crystal only in special locations where
other insulin molecules have formed right angles, called
kinks. Using atomic-force microscopy, they discovered
a new mechanism by which insulin molecules attach themselves
to crystals to form these kinks. They found that groups
of insulin blocks create large protrusions, dubbed "mounds" by
Vekilov and Georgiou. The very nature of these mounds
results in the creation of multiple kinks – far more,
in fact, than other methods of kink formation.
By providing so many spaces where insulin molecules can attach to an insulin
crystal, these mounds allow for the rapid growth of that crystal and only form
when there is a surplus of insulin that allows for rapid crystal growth. Since
no mounds appear when there is a lack of insulin and insulin crystals both
grow and dissolve at kinks, mounds are important sources of a crystal's net
growth.
"Typically in nature, fast growth also results in fast dissolution," Vekilov
said. "But this process cheats physics because when there isn't a lot of insulin,
mounds don't form. It's an asymmetric mechanism that has no balance."
While this discovery will play a significant role in gaining a better understanding
of diabetes, it also is an historic find in the area of crystal formation and
use, as only the third mechanism of crystal formation ever discovered. Before
this finding, there were only two known ways that crystals grew – the first
was proposed in 1876 and the second in 1968. Though the first and second discoveries,
proposed by prominent American scientist and founder of modern thermodynamics
J.W. Gibbs and by Russian scientist V.V. Voronkov, respectively, only recently
demonstrated their applicability to real systems, this latest mechanism has
already been experimentally proven in the work by Vekilov and Georgiou.
|

Peter Vekilov, associate professor of chemical engineering,
and Dimitra Georgiou, a recent doctoral graduate
in chemical engineering, work with an atomic-force
microscope to capture images of insulin molecules
only five nanometers in diameter.
Credit: Jeff Shaw
|
"It
is possible that crystals composed of materials other
than insulin also grow in this manner," Vekilov said. "If
so, this discovery could significantly impact any
number of fields that deal with crystals. It can
help us understand all processes of crystal formation,
including semiconductor and optical materials, geological
crystallization, ice formation and the physiological
and pathological crystallization of proteins and
small molecules."
About the University of Houston
The University of Houston, Texas' premier metropolitan research and teaching
institution, is home to more than 40 research centers and institutes and
sponsors more than 300 partnerships with corporate, civic and governmental
entities. UH, the most diverse research university in the country, stands
at the forefront of education, research and service with more than 35,000
students.
About the Cullen College of Engineering
UH Cullen College of Engineering has produced five U.S. astronauts, ten members
of the National Academy of Engineering, and degree programs that have ranked
in the top ten nationally. With more than 2,600 students, the college offers
accredited undergraduate and graduate degrees in biomedical, chemical, civil
and environmental, electrical and computer, industrial, and mechanical engineering.
It also offers specialized programs in aerospace, materials, petroleum engineering
and telecommunications.
For more information about UH, visit the university's
Newsroom at www.uh.edu/newsroom . |
|
This
story has been adapted from a news release
-
Diese Meldung basiert auf einer Pressemitteilung -
Deze
tekst is gebaseerd op een nieuwsbericht - |
|
|

who
is reading
the wave ?
|
missed
some news ?
click on archive photo
|
or
how about joining us
|

or
contacting us ?
|
about
us
|
our
mission
|
|
| |
|