Swedish team restores blood sugar control in diabetic mice

Researchers in Sweden have created insulin-producing cells from human stem cells that reversed diabetes symptoms when transplanted into mice. The cells matured after placement in the eye and maintained glucose regulation for months. The work was published in Stem Cell Reports.

Scientists at Karolinska Institutet developed an improved protocol to derive pancreatic islets from multiple human pluripotent stem cell lines. The method uses refined culture conditions and three-dimensional clusters to reduce unwanted cell types and enhance glucose responsiveness.

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Researchers at the University of California, Riverside say they have developed a flexible, battery-powered gel patch that generates oxygen inside hard-to-heal wounds—an approach aimed at countering deep-tissue oxygen deprivation that can stall recovery and contribute to amputations. In experiments in diabetic and older mice, the team reported that wounds that often remained open—and were sometimes fatal—closed in about 23 days when treated with the oxygen-generating patch.

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