More than 55 million people in Europe currently suffer from diabetes, and by 2030, this figure is expected to rise to 64 million. Although there is currently no cure, type 1 diabetes can be treated by transplanting islet cells or even a whole pancreas into a patient from a donor. Unfortunately, the number of diabetes patients far outweighs the number of donors. Stem cells could play a vital role in addressing this gap.
Instead of using donor cells, new beta
cells could be grown from stem cells and used in replacement therapy.
There are several different ideas about where to get these stem cells
and how they could be used. In order to boost research efforts in the
area, the European Commission's FP7 HEALTH research programme recently
granted 6 million euro to the HUMEN project which brings together six
leading European research groups and three industry partners to focus on
the stem cell-based treatment of diabetes.
Despite progress in creating insulin-producing beta cells from human
pluripotent stem cells, scientists have so far been unable to develop
mature, transplantable beta cells that can cure diabetes. Headed by
Professor Henrik Semb from the Danish Stem Cell Center (DanStem), the
HUMEN partners hope to make the breakthrough that will improve quality
of life for our increasing population of diabetics. The project, which
kicked-off at a meeting in Copenhagen at the end of January, will also
help keep Europe at the forefront of stem cell research, and create new
commercial possibilities and increased competitiveness for the European
biomedical industry.
Project leader, Professor Semb noted, 'With this grant, we are able
to bring together some of the best stem cell research groups in Europe. I
believe that HUMEN's unique constellation of research competences, the
inter-disciplinarity, and the very coordinated and collaborative
approach that our project is based on, will enable us to reach the goal
of developing functional, glucose-responsive, insulin-producing beta
cells, and thus bring the new therapy closer to the patients.'HUMEN is
not working in isolation - it is one of seven stem cell research
projects that were recently granted funding from the European
Commission. Although they focus on different disease areas and types of
stem cells, they are all working to understand how stem cells work and
how to control them so they can be used in treatments for patients. More
specifically, they are all investigating underlying mechanism of the
self-renewing capacity of stem cells and their differentiation into
mature functional cell types suitable for various cell-based therapeutic
applications. Of these seven projects, HUMEN will be working in
cooperation with three: PLURIMES, NEUROSTEMCELLREPAIR and THYMISTEM.
Source: Uniwersytet w Kopenhadze
Reference documents: Based on a CORDIS Wire press release from HUMEN