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    Diabetes Research at UMass Chan Medical School

    Focused on improving diabetes therapies and finding the cure

 

World-Class Diabetes Research

 UMass Chan Medical School Diabetes Center of Excellence Directors

Research Strategies to Prevent and Cure Diabetes

Under the co-direction of Dale L. Greiner, PhD, and David M. Harlan, MD, Diabetes Center of Excellence (DCOE) scientists at UMass Chan Medical School are gaining new knowledge about the disease by studying human tissueshuman cells inside novel biological models of the human immune system.  Understanding what causes diabetes will allow us to develop effective therapies and ultimately find the cure. 

Diabetes Center of Excellence News

Total: displaying 12 out of 118 results
  • Jennifer Wang Interferon paper with Wura Arowosegbe, PhD

    Jennifer Wang Lab Sheds Light on Interferon Signaling in Diabetes

    The laboratory of physician-scientist Jennifer Wang, MD, investigated the role of interferons in type 1 diabetes, discovering that type I interferon signaling is not the sole driver of the disease. Their newly published study tested JAK inhibitors like ruxolitinib. They found a potential preventative treatment that blocked diabetes development in their novel rat models of T1D, highlighting the complex interplay of immune factors in the disease's progression.

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  • Scientists in the Breakthrough T1D Center of Excellence in New England

    Genetically Engineering Human Beta Cells as a Potential Therapeutic Cure for Type 1 Diabetes

    Scientists in the Breakthrough T1D Center of Excellence in New England are collaborating to create a stem cell-derived beta cell replacement therapy that would be invisible to the immune system and provide insulin independence for people with type 1 diabetes.  The team is led by David Harlan, MD, and includes 10 scientists from the Diabetes Center of Excellence at UMass Chan Medical School.

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  • Ekaterina Korobkina fat metabolism study

    Guertin Lab Publication in Nature Discovers New Information About Brown Fat Metabolism

    A newly published study in Nature Metabolism from the laboratory of David Guertin, PhD, contributed to understanding brown fat metabolism and could potentially lead to new approaches for managing metabolic disorders.  The research, led by graduate student Kate Korobkina, provides new insights into mitigating mitochondrial stress and the connection between dietary carbohydrates and heat production in brown fat.

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  • Glucose Management in Pregnancy

    Studying Blood Glucose Management During Pregnancy to Improve the Health of Mothers and Children

    The 2024 Herman G. Berkman Diabetes Clinical Innovation Fund grant was awarded to Gianna Wilkie, MD, to conduct a clinical study at UMass Memorial Medical Center of pregnant women with type 2 diabetes comparing continuous glucose monitoring to multiple daily fingersticks to check blood sugars.  It will include maternal blood glucose control, patient satisfaction, and other perinatal outcomes.

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  • Adipocyte cell image

    Study to Boost Energy Production in Fat Cells Could Lead to Weight Maintenance Therapies

    The research laboratory of Silvia Corvera, MD identified ways to increase energy production in brown and beige adipocytes.  It could lead to new therapeutic approaches for obesity, diabetes, and other metabolic disorders by enhancing thermogenesis in existing adipocytes.
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  • Lou Messina Type 2 diabetes research UMass Chan Medical School

    Investigating the Effects of High Cholesterol on Artery Development in the Messina Lab

    A study from the laboratory of Louis Messina, MD, published in JVS-Vascular Science, explored how hypercholesterolemia (high cholesterol) can affect the growth of new blood vessels (collateral arteries), that are important for maintaining blood flow when main arteries are clogged.  This is particularly relevant for conditions including peripheral arterial disease (PAD), where clogged arteries in the legs can lead to serious complications, including limb loss. People living with type1 and type 2 diabetes are at increased risk to develop PAD.

     

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  • Nate Farrington Diabetes Rainbow Report

    Six Sigma Project Reduced Prescription Wait Times and Increased Efficiency in the Endocrinology & Diabetes Clinics

    Nate Farrington is Supervisor of the Endocrinology & Diabetes care teams, overseeing operations at the Ambulatory Care Center on the University Campus, and the newly renovated Endocrinology and Metabolic Weight Clinics downtown Worcester. His recent Six Sigma Green Belt lean project has improved efficiency by reducing prescription wait times by more than 80%.  Nate has been sharing his productivity tool with other UMass Memorial departments, and he received two grants to help further his education. 

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  • Fatty Liver Disease and Diabetes

    Understanding Liver Disease and Its Connection to Type 2 Diabetes

    UMass Memorial Diabetologist Madona Azar, MD, explains the connection between type 2 diabetes and liver disease. Understanding the risk of developing this common yet underrecognized condition is essential to treating it.

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  • Michael Brehm and Dale Greiner UMass Chan Diabetes Research

    Developing Improved Models for Cutting-Edge Immune Cell Studies to Accelerate Disease Treatments in the Brehm & Greiner Laboratories

    The laboratories of Michael Brehm, PhD, and Dale Greiner, PhD, are leading a multisite collaboration that has been approved for a four-year grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to create cutting-edge humanized mouse resources to support the efficient development of human tissue resident macrophages in disease relevant models. 

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  • UMass Memorial Diabetic Health Outreach Clinic for Worcester's Underserved Community

    UMass Memorial Diabetic Health Outreach Clinic for Worcester's Underserved Community

    The 8th biannual Diabetes Foot & Health Care Clinic for the underserved community was held at South Middlesex Non-Profit Housing Corporation in Leominster organized by vascular surgeon & diabetes scientist Tammy Nguyen, MD.  All attendees received a foot exam, blood sugar, lipid & BMI testing, wound care and other health resources.  They were also each given sneakers, socks and a hot meal. The first of these bi-annual multidisciplinary outreach clinics was on World Diabetes Day in 2020 and are now held every summer and in November during Diabetes Awareness Month.  

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  • Tammy Nguyen and Silvia Corvera Fat Tissue Plays a Central Role in the Aging Process Nature Metabolism

    Adipose (Fat) Tissue Plays an Important Role in the Aging Process

    Tammy Nguyen, MD, PhD, and Silvia Corvera, MD, published a review article in the journal Nature Metabolism that discusses the role of adipose tissue (fat tissue) in the aging process. As people get older age, fat tissue undergoes changes that can influence our metabolism, immune function, and even lifespan.  Drs. Nguyen & Corvera highlight that over time fat tissue loses its ability to store and release energy efficiently. It can lead to an imbalance in energy metabolism, contributing to conditions including cardiovascular diseases, obesity and diabetes.

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  • Michael Brehm, PhD

    Michael Brehm, PhD, Promoted to Associate Director

    Michael Brehm, PhD, Associate Professor of Molecular Medicine, The Harvey A. Shultz Chair in Diabetes, and co-director of the UMass Chan Humanized Mouse Core, was promoted to associate director of the Diabetes Center of Excellence (DCOE) at UMass Chan Medical School in March of 2024. In this role, Dr. Brehm will work alongside co-directors David Harlan, MD, and Dale Greiner, PhD, in leading our diabetes research efforts, including the production of human stem cell-derived islets in the Pappas Stem Cell Differentiation Core.

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