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Strawberries researched in development of insulin pill

2019-09-03 cmu.edu

Tag: fruits protein Strawberries

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More than 30 million Americans suffer from diabetes and must inject themselves with insulin two to four times daily. Researchers have been looking for ways to administer the drug orally, and researchers at Carnegie Mellon University have now shown that this is possible. Chemical Engineering Associate Professor Kathryn Whitehead and her team said the secret lies in an unlikely place: strawberries.

"The problem with insulin," said research assistant Nicholas Lamson, "is that its a protein. The human stomach is very adept at breaking down proteins, such as with food."

For insulin to be therapeutic, the protein needs to be absorbed intact by the small intestine. Researchers have developed many ways to encapsulate insulin molecules so that they can make it through the stomach to the small intestine. But what to do with them once the pill is there has been the biggest sticking point. Allowing the proteins to pass into the small intestine fully undigested means the insulin is too large to be absorbed through the intestine and into the blood stream. And while compounds already exist that can open the pores of the small intestine, few can do it without lasting damage.

"We took around 110 fruits and vegetables and screened them for an ability to open up the gaps between the cells of the intestine wide enough to allow the insulin to pass through," Whitehead said.

That is wher strawberries come in. The same chemical that makes strawberries red -pelargonidin- can dilate intestinal pores in a nontoxic way that later allows them to shrink back to normal. Combine this molecule with an encapsulated insulin package and you should have an insulin pill that can help diabetics manage their blood sugar with no negative side effects.

According to an article, the research team has proven the pills efficacy in mice, but there is still a long way to go before an insulin pill is made available to human diabetic patients.

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