Sign in Register
Posted On: 20 July 2019 06:29 pm
Updated On: 12 November 2020 02:04 pm

HBKU collaborates with researchers from University of Warwick

Binu Cherian
Binu Cherian
Discuss here!
Start a discussion
HBKUs-Qatar-Biomedical-Research-Institute-collaborates-with-University-of-Warwick-researchers

Qatar Biomedical Research Institute (QBRI), part of Hamad Bin Khalifa University (HBKU), recently collaborated in a study initiated by researchers at the University of Warwick, United Kingdom, which sought to examine the impact of normal and high concentrations of glucose on blood vessels.

The findings of the initial study– led by Dr. Naila Rabbani from Warwick Medical School – have been published in Scientific Reports journal and could help to identify new ways to prevent organ damage from complications related to diabetes.

The research was conducted in collaboration with Professor Paul Thornalley, director of the Diabetes Research Center at QBRI, whose involvement in the study began when he was Professor of Systems Biology at the University of Warwick. The research team is now working to further develop this research, including its application to cell types found in the kidney, eye and nerves of arms and legs that become damaged in diabetes.

According to researchers from the University of Warwick and now QBRI, a mechanism in the cells that line blood vessels and which helps to process the sugar glucose, becomes uncontrolled in diabetes patients and could be linked to the formation of blood clots and inflammation.

Researchers examined the impact of normal and high concentrations of glucose on human endothelial cells, which form the lining of our blood vessels. By increasing the concentration of glucose in the culture medium, researchers modeled the effects on the human endothelial cells of hyperglycemia - a condition in which an individual’s blood glucose is abnormally high and is commonly caused by diabetes.

The initial study confirmed that glucose metabolism in endothelial cells is increased in high concentrations of glucose. They showed for the first time that this occurs because HK2 degrades more slowly in high glucose concentration and thereby metabolizes more glucose than normal. Increased glucose metabolism is the driver of metabolic dysfunction of endothelial cells in model hyperglycemia.

The Diabetes Research Center at QBRI promotes innovative research on both type 1 and type 2 diabetes and related metabolic disorders. The center’s primary goal is to gain fundamental knowledge and enhance the understanding of social, molecular, and genetic causes of the disease. These efforts will pave the way for the identification of therapeutic targets and the development of novel therapies and treatment modalities for this globally devastating disease.

Source: Press release