Wednesday, May 18, 2022
Detect Diabetes
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Clinical Trials
  • Diabetes Risk Test
  • Preventing Type 2 Diabetes
  • Symptoms & Causes
  • Monogenic Diabetes
  • More
    • What is Diabetes Mellitus?
    • Diabetes Diet, Eating, & Physical Activity
    • Gestational Diabetes
    • Diabetes Tests & Diagnosis
    • Insulin Resistance & Prediabetes
    • Insulin, Medicines, & Other Diabetes Treatments
    • Preventing Diabetes Problems
    • Risk Factors for Type 2 Diabetes
Detect Diabetes
No Result
View All Result
Home Insulin, Medicines, & Other Diabetes Treatments

Mitochondria of diabetic patients can’t keep time — ScienceDaily

detect diabetes by detect diabetes
October 30, 2021
in Insulin, Medicines, & Other Diabetes Treatments
0
Key protein linked to appetite and obesity in mice — ScienceDaily
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Almost all cells regulate their biological processes over a 24-hour period, otherwise called a cell’s circadian rhythm. To do so, cells use a biological clock that cycles different genes on and off throughout the day and night. Scientists already know that our metabolic health can suffer when our biological clock breaks down, due to shift work or sleep disorders, for example. However, it’s unclear how exactly the biological clock of people with type 2 diabetes differs from healthy people.

Now a team of international scientists has shown that the skeletal muscle in people with type 2 diabetes has a different circadian rhythm. They argue that this might arise because of a communication breakdown between a cell’s time keeping molecules and mitochondria, which produce chemical energy for cells.

“The promise of this research is that it may help us to fine tune the timing of interventions and other medications to treat type 2 diabetes, in order to optimize their effectiveness,” says Professor Juleen R. Zierath from Karolinska Institutet and the Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Basic Metabolic Research (CBMR) at the University of Copenhagen.

A different pattern of daily gene expression

In the study, which was published in Science Advances, the scientists first obtained skeletal muscle cells from people with type 2 diabetes and measured which genes showed cycling behavior over two days and compared them with cells from similar healthy people. They discovered that cells from people with type 2 diabetes had fewer, and some different, cycling genes.

They carried out further experiments using data generated from clinical tests in people with type 2 diabetes and mice, as well as cell-based experiments. These experiments demonstrated that mitochondria communicate with the molecules that keep time in our cells, and that this communication is disrupted in people with type 2 diabetes.

Diabetes treatments may be more effective if timed to the body clock

Some of the most widely used pharmacological treatments for type 2 diabetes affect mitochondria, meaning that they may work differently depending on the time of day they are taken. As a result, these findings highlight the importance of considering cellular rhythms when prescribing treatments for type 2 diabetes.

“Exercise and diet are regularly used treatment interventions for people with type 2 diabetes, and both of these treatments can affect the time-keeping molecules and mitochondria,” says Dr. Brendan Gabriel from the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology at Karolinska Institutet.

Brendan Gabriel is first author on the paper together with Assistant Professor Ali Altintas from CBMR.

“Given that disrupted sleeping patterns are known to be associated with an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes, our findings provide evidence of how these disruptions may link to the molecular biology within cells,” says Ali Altintas.

Tags: DiabeticMitochondriaPatientsScienceDailyTime
Previous Post

3 Biotech Stocks That Could Make You Richer

Next Post

Intermittent fasting may put you at risk of developing Type 2 diabetes: Study

detect diabetes

detect diabetes

Next Post
Intermittent fasting may put you at risk of developing Type 2 diabetes: Study

Intermittent fasting may put you at risk of developing Type 2 diabetes: Study

Discussion about this post

Recommended

The #1 Cause of Diabetes, Say Physicians — Eat This Not That

The #1 Cause of Diabetes, Say Physicians — Eat This Not That

2 months ago
Texas A&M AgriLife Extension celebrates National Diabetes Month | Family

Texas A&M AgriLife Extension celebrates National Diabetes Month | Family

7 months ago

Don't Miss

Prediabetes Can Progress in Just One Year

Prediabetes Can Progress in Just One Year

May 18, 2022
Arecor Announces Oral Presentation at Attd 2022 of Phase i

ARECOR TO HOST KOL WEBINAR ON THE NEED FOR CONCENTRATED AND

May 18, 2022
Regular health check-ups for children, adults and seniors and their importance

Regular health check-ups for children, adults and seniors and their importance

May 18, 2022

Incremental levels of diagnostic information incentivize health-seeking in non-alcoholic fatty liver: a randomized clinical trial

May 18, 2022

Recent News

Prediabetes Can Progress in Just One Year

Prediabetes Can Progress in Just One Year

May 18, 2022
Arecor Announces Oral Presentation at Attd 2022 of Phase i

ARECOR TO HOST KOL WEBINAR ON THE NEED FOR CONCENTRATED AND

May 18, 2022
Regular health check-ups for children, adults and seniors and their importance

Regular health check-ups for children, adults and seniors and their importance

May 18, 2022

Categories

  • Clinical Trials
  • Diabetes Diet, Eating, & Physical Activity
  • Diabetes Risk Test
  • Diabetes Tests & Diagnosis
  • Gestational Diabetes
  • Insulin Resistance & Prediabetes
  • Insulin, Medicines, & Other Diabetes Treatments
  • Managing Diabetes
  • Monogenic Diabetes
  • Preventing Diabetes Problems
  • Preventing Type 2 Diabetes
  • Risk Factors for Type 2 Diabetes
  • Symptoms & Causes
  • What is Diabetes Mellitus?

Tags

adults Benefits Blood Cancer Care Children COVID COVID19 Diabetes Diabetic diagnosis diet disease Drug Drugs Eat Factors Gestational Global Glucose Health Heart high Insulin Levels Market Medical News obesity Patients People Pregnancy Report Research risk signs Size study Sugar symptoms test treatment type weight Women
  • Disclaimer
  • Cookies Policy
  • AntiSpam Policy
  • Amazon Disclaimer
  • Contact

© 2021 detectdiabetes

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Clinical Trials
  • Diabetes Risk Test
  • Preventing Type 2 Diabetes
  • Symptoms & Causes
  • Monogenic Diabetes
  • More
    • What is Diabetes Mellitus?
    • Diabetes Diet, Eating, & Physical Activity
    • Gestational Diabetes
    • Diabetes Tests & Diagnosis
    • Insulin Resistance & Prediabetes
    • Insulin, Medicines, & Other Diabetes Treatments
    • Preventing Diabetes Problems
    • Risk Factors for Type 2 Diabetes

© 2021 detectdiabetes