UNMC lands $1.6 million grant to study effect of diabetes on developing embryo

UNMC researchers have received a $1.6 million grant from the National

Institutes of Health to study the effect of diabetes on the developing

embryo. The grant, to be funded over five years, was awarded to Claudia

Kappen, Ph.D., associate professor of genetics, cell biology and anatomy

in UNMCs Munroe-Meyer Institute.

Diabetes of the mother is a significant risk factor for birth defects,

Dr. Kappen said. The risk for birth defects in these pregnancies is four

to 10 times higher than in the general population. We want to understand

how maternal diabetes affects the developing embryo.

Heart defects, neural tube defects and caudal defects are most commonly

associated with maternal diabetes, although they are not exclusive to the

disease. Diabetes is a disease in which the body does not produce or properly

use insulin. Insulin is a hormone that is needed to convert sugar, starches

and other food into energy needed for daily life.

Glucose and insulin levels vary widely in diabetes, making it difficult

to study the origins of such birth defects and understand how they develop.

To do so, Dr. Kappens team has created mouse models for two of the most

common characteristic defects in diabetic embryopathy, neural tube defects

and caudal regression. Caudal defects, which encompass severe growth defects

of sacral (lower) vertebrae, the anorectal region and, in some cases, the

kidney, are most highly correlated to diabetes, Dr. Kappen said.

Dr. Kappens team is using transgenic mice to better understand the

pathogenesis of the disorders at a molecular level. In transgenic mice,

researchers add a gene. The team has found that several embryonic genes

important for normal development are changed when the mother has diabetes.

Dr. Kappens team also has found that the Wnt3A gene, which is known to

play a role with caudal growth defects, is changed when the mother has

diabetes.

There is increased cell death in these embryos which is why the caudal

area doesnt develop properly, Dr. Kappen said. We dont know why these

cells died. One of the areas were looking at is the role of cell death

in these defects.

According to the American Diabetes Association, 18.2 million people

in the United States, or 6.3 percent of the population, have diabetes.

While an estimated 13 million have been diagnosed, unfortunately, 5.2 million

people (or nearly one-third) are unaware that they have the disease. Gestational

diabetes affects about 4 percent of all pregnant women – about 135,000

cases in the United States each year.

Michael Salbaum, Ph.D., assistant professor of genetics, cell biology

and anatomy at UNMC, is co-investigator on the project. Dr. Kappens team

also is studying the regulation of genes affected by diabetes and the underlying

molecular mechanisms of skeletal development.