Results of a preclinical study involving DiaKine Therapeutics' lead drug candidate Lisofylline (LSF) indicate the compound may reduce two key risk factors for type-2 diabetes. LSF was shown to increase insulin action and reduce the level of inflammatory cells in fat tissue of mice fed diets high in polyunsaturated or saturated fats, according to the study conducted by the Garvan Institute of Medical Research in Sydney, Australia and presented at the Keystone Symposia Conference.
"The results are quite exciting and indicate that LSF, and related DiaKine small molecule therapies, could play a significant part in treating type-2 diabetes by reducing inflammation and improving insulin action," said Dr Jerry Nadler, chairman, and chief science officer of DiaKine Therapeutics and the chief of Medicine at the Eastern Virginia Medical School in Norfolk, Virginia.
"The study results complement our earlier findings, and point toward a much broader role for DiaKine's drugs in reducing the factors that cause type-1 and type-2 diabetes." The study results showed a reduced macrophage content in the fat tissue of LSF-treated mice, when compared to controls, indicating its immune modulating action. Results also showed improved insulin action in glucose and insulin tolerance tests in LSF-treated mice. The authors of the study are Dr Georgia Frangioudakis and Dr Carsten Schmitz-Peiffer of the Garvan Institute; Dr Hong Pei of the University of Virginia; Dr Todd Mitchell and James Garrard of the University of Wollongong, Australia, and; Dr Nadler.
"The Garvan Institute study is an additional validation of DiaKine's small molecule approach to treating diabetes and its related complications," said Keith Ignotz, President and Chief Executive Officer for DiaKine Therapeutics. "We believe that our therapies hold the key to closing down the inflammation-related factors that lead to type-1 and type-2 diabetes. We want to thank the study authors and the Garvan Institute, the University of Wollongong and University of Virginia for carrying out this important study."
LSF is a synthetic small molecule with novel anti-inflammatory properties that has been shown to block autoimmune damage to insulin producing cells and to improve insulin action in type-2 diabetes. Lisofylline has also demonstrated that it can effectively prevent type-1 diabetes in preclinical models.
DiaKine Therapeutics is a development-stage company commercializing novel immune modulators for the treatment of diabetes and related complications.
The Garvan Institute of Medical Research has grown to become one of Australia's largest autonomous medical research institutions with nearly five hundred scientists, students and support staff.