Stress Hormone's Startling Powers
By SHIRLEY S. WANG
WSJ
A hormone that can wreak havoc with the body by setting off harmful effects of stress may have a far more positive use: in a new way to treat diabetes.
The hormone, known as corticotropin-releasing factor, or CRF, has been implicated in anxiety, obesity, addiction and even Alzheimer's disease. The brain and other organs make CRF. It triggers a cascade of chemicals that ultimately produce cortisol and adrenaline and activate the body's "fight or flight" response. Under chronic stress, cortisol breaks down muscle, suppresses the immune system and raises the risk of high blood pressure.
But recently, researchers have showed that CRF increases both insulin secretion and production of the cells that make insulin in the pancreas, known as beta cells. Diabetes, which affects nearly 24 million Americans, involves the body's inability to properly use insulin to convert sugar into usable energy. The findings, which support a hunch that others in the field have had, point to a possible pathway for treatment of diabetes.
"The machinery that allows the cell to respond to the hormone has been found," says Wylie Vale, a professor of molecular neurobiology at the La Jolla, Calif., Salk Institute for Biological Studies, who discovered the structure of CRF in 1981. "We are exploring how this machinery is controlled under conditions such as diabetes and obesity. What we really want to do is understand the system." The research of Dr. Vale and his colleagues was reported in a December paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
(More here.)
WSJ
A hormone that can wreak havoc with the body by setting off harmful effects of stress may have a far more positive use: in a new way to treat diabetes.
The hormone, known as corticotropin-releasing factor, or CRF, has been implicated in anxiety, obesity, addiction and even Alzheimer's disease. The brain and other organs make CRF. It triggers a cascade of chemicals that ultimately produce cortisol and adrenaline and activate the body's "fight or flight" response. Under chronic stress, cortisol breaks down muscle, suppresses the immune system and raises the risk of high blood pressure.
But recently, researchers have showed that CRF increases both insulin secretion and production of the cells that make insulin in the pancreas, known as beta cells. Diabetes, which affects nearly 24 million Americans, involves the body's inability to properly use insulin to convert sugar into usable energy. The findings, which support a hunch that others in the field have had, point to a possible pathway for treatment of diabetes.
"The machinery that allows the cell to respond to the hormone has been found," says Wylie Vale, a professor of molecular neurobiology at the La Jolla, Calif., Salk Institute for Biological Studies, who discovered the structure of CRF in 1981. "We are exploring how this machinery is controlled under conditions such as diabetes and obesity. What we really want to do is understand the system." The research of Dr. Vale and his colleagues was reported in a December paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
(More here.)
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