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Paula Hinely (Medical College of Georgia)
A powerful antioxidant in green tea may prevent or delay the onset
of type 1 diabetes, Medical College of Georgia researchers say.
Researchers were testing EGCG, green tea's predominant antioxidant, in
a laboratory mouse with type 1 diabetes and primary Sjogren's syndrome,
which damages moisture-producing glands, causing dry mouth and eyes.
"Our study focused on Sjogren's syndrome, so learning that EGCG also
can prevent and delay insulin-dependent type 1 diabetes was a big
surprise," says Dr. Stephen Hsu, molecular/cell biologist in the School
of Dentistry.
They found it also worked well in their original disease focus.
In the mouse, EGCG reduced the severity and delayed onset of
salivary gland damage associated with Sjogren's syndrome, which has no
known cure.
"EGCG modulates several important genes, so it suppresses the
abnormality at the molecular level in the salivary gland. It also
significantly lowered the serum autoantibodies, reducing the severity
of Sjogren's syndrome-like symptoms," Dr. Hsu says. Autoantibodies are
antibodies the body makes against itself.
Both type 1 diabetes and Sjogren's syndrome are autoimmune diseases,
which cause the body to attack itself. Autoimmune disorders are the
third most common group of diseases in the United States and affect
about 8 percent of the population, says Dr. Hsu. Sjogren's syndrome can
occur alone or secondary to another autoimmune disease, such as lupus,
rheumatoid arthritis or type 1 diabetes.
The study, published in the Oct. 24 issue of Life Sciences, supports earlier research showing EGCG's impact on helping prevent autoimmune disease.
Researchers treated a control group of mice with water and a test
group with a purified form of EGCG dissolved in the drinking water. At
16 weeks, the EGCG-fed mice were 6.1 times more likely to be
diabetes-free than the water-fed group, and 4.2 times more likely at 22
weeks.
"Previous studies used another animal model that developed type 1
diabetes only after an injected chemical killed the insulin-producing
cells. That may not accurately resemble disease development in humans,
because type 1 diabetes is a genetic disease," says Dr. Hsu, the
study's corresponding author.
"Our study is significant because we used a mouse model with the
genetic defects that cause symptoms similar to human type 1 diabetes
and Sjogren's syndrome, so the immune cells attack the pancreas and
salivary glands until they are no longer functional."
Another related finding was that even when salivary cells were under
attack, they seemed to be rapidly reproducing in the control group. The
proliferation was suppressed in the EGCG-fed group.
"It's kind of counterintuitive – why would there be proliferation of
the glandular cells occurring when the present cells are not secreting
saliva?" says Dr. Kevin Gillespie, first author of the study he
conducted for his master's research project at MCG.
The proliferation phenomenon also can be observed in psoriasis, an
autoimmune disease affecting the skin and joints, says Dr. Hsu. "Normal
skin cells turn over every 30 days or so, but skin cells with psoriasis
turn over every two or three days." Dr. Hsu's group previously found
that green tea polyphenols, including EGCG, inhibited rapid
proliferation in an animal model for human psoriasis.
"We never thought proliferation was going on to this extent in the
salivary gland, but we now believe it is tightly associated with
Sjogren's syndrome," he says.
The next step is to observe Sjogren's syndrome in human salivary
gland samples to determine whether the study findings hold up in
humans.
"If the abnormal expression of these genes is the same in humans as
in the animal model, then the second stage will be intervention and
treatment with a pure form of EGCG," says Dr. Hsu.
"The benefit of using green tea in preventing or slowing these
autoimmune diseases is that it's natural and not known to harm the
body," says Dr. Gillespie, periodontics chief resident at Fort Gordon's
Tingay Dental Clinic. "EGCG doesn't have the negative side-effects that
can be associated with steroids or other medications that could
otherwise be prescribed."
Source: Medical College of Georgia
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