A University of Houston professor and
his student have made a major discovery
in the field of diabetes research and
diagnosis, finding a new mechanism for
the formation of insulin crystals in the
pancreas.
Peter Vekilov, associate professor of
chemical engineering, and Dimitra
Georgiou, a recent doctoral graduate in
chemical engineering, both in UH’s
Cullen College of Engineering, are
behind this breakthrough. Since
insufficient insulin production in the
pancreas is one of the manifestations of
adult-onset diabetes, Vekilov and
Georgiou are studying the process of how
insulin is produced in the first place.
Understanding how the body creates this
hormone will make it easier for
researchers to discover why some
individuals do not produce enough
insulin and thus develop diabetes,
Vekilov said. Specifically, the two have
focused on the creation of insulin
crystals, the form in which insulin is
stored in the pancreas before it is
released in the bloodstream.
“It is possible that the insulin
deficiency happens when the crystals
don’t form properly and then part of the
insulin that is produced gets
destroyed,” Vekilov said.
Proinsulin, a molecular precursor to
insulin itself, is the reason for these
crystals. After an insulin molecule is
produced from proinsulin, it attaches to
an insulin crystal only in special
locations where other insulin molecules
have formed right angles, called kinks.
Using atomic-force microscopy, they
discovered a new mechanism by which
insulin molecules attach themselves to
crystals to form these kinks. They found
that groups of insulin blocks create
large protrusions, dubbed “mounds” by
Vekilov and Georgiou. The very nature of
these mounds results in the creation of
multiple kinks – far more, in fact, than
other methods of kink formation.
By providing so many spaces where
insulin molecules can attach to an
insulin crystal, these mounds allow for
the rapid growth of that crystal and
only form when there is a surplus of
insulin that allows for rapid crystal
growth. Since no mounds appear when
there is a lack of insulin and insulin
crystals both grow and dissolve at
kinks, mounds are important sources of a
crystal’s net growth.
“Typically in nature, fast growth also
results in fast dissolution,” Vekilov
said. “But this process cheats physics
because when there isn’t a lot of
insulin, mounds don’t form. It’s an
asymmetric mechanism that has no
balance.”
While this discovery will play a
significant role in gaining a better
understanding of diabetes, it also is an
historic find in the area of crystal
formation and use, as only the third
mechanism of crystal formation ever
discovered. Before this finding, there
were only two known ways that crystals
grew – the first was proposed in 1876
and the second in 1968. Though the first
and second discoveries, proposed by
prominent American scientist and founder
of modern thermodynamics J.W. Gibbs and
by Russian scientist V.V. Voronkov,
respectively, only recently demonstrated
their applicability to real systems,
this latest mechanism has already been
experimentally proven in the work by
Vekilov and Georgiou.
“It is possible that crystals composed
of materials other than insulin also
grow in this manner,” Vekilov said. “If
so, this discovery could significantly
impact any number of fields that deal
with crystals. It can help us understand
all processes of crystal formation,
including semiconductor and optical
materials, geological crystallization,
ice formation and the physiological and
pathological crystallization of proteins
and small molecules.”
Source: University of Houston
Published on 16th
MAY 2006