Gene Therapy for Mouse with Type 1 Diabetes

George Gittes and Xiangwei Xiao In these two microscopy images, human islets (the source of insulin cells) were poisoned with a drug to remove the insulin cells, and then treated with either an empty virus (left panel) or the therapeutic virus (right panel), and then grown in a diabetic mouse. The green staining on the right reflects abundant insulin cell in these islets. The blood sugar of the diabetic mice were made normal by the gene-therapy-treated human islets on the right.

George Gittes and Xiangwei Xiao In these two microscopy images, human islets (the source of insulin cells) were poisoned with a drug to remove the insulin cells, and then treated with either an empty virus (left panel) or the therapeutic virus (right panel), and then grown in a diabetic mouse. The green staining on the right reflects abundant insulin cell in these islets. The blood sugar of the diabetic mice were made normal by the gene-therapy-treated human islets on the right.



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