Our annual funding round is designed to support bright young researchers, as well as established institutions, as they strive to make the kind of life-changing breakthrough our diabetes community is hoping for. 

Our first research award was made in 1999 for a small equipment grant and since that time, we have committed more than £12 million to diabetes research in the UK and as part of the International Diabetes Wellness Network, around the world.

To read more about our research strategy, click here

Our Funded Research 

2021   2020   2019   2018   2017   2016   2015   2014   2013   2012   2011   
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2013

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Can VEGFC rescue albuminuria in a experimental model of diabetic nephropathy?

Recipient: Dr Rebecca Foster
Institution: University of Bristol
City: Bristol
Amount: £12,460

Description - click here to read

Damage to the endothelial cells that form the blood vessels is a key step in many of diabetes-related pathologies. This damage is associated with removal of a protective layer (glycocalyx) that lines the inside of blood vessels. The kidney glomerulus is a convoluted ball of small blood vessels which is also susceptible to loss of the glycocalyx in diabetes, leading to endothelial dysfunction and diabetic kidney disease. Glomerular endothelial damage can be measured by small amounts of protein escaping into the urine and reflects generalised endothelial damage. We have identified a growth factor that is produced naturally within the body, which maintains the glycocalyx on glomerular endothelial cells and stops passage of protein in culture conditions. We aim to assess the therapeutic potential of this growth factor on rescuing damaged glomerular endothelial cells in an experimental mouse model of diabetic kidney disease.

2013

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Sutherland-Earl Clinical Fellowship

Development of a robust clinically-relevant approach to antibody-medicated diabetes and hypoglycaemia

Recipient: Dr David Church
Institution: Cambridge University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
City: Cambridge
Amount: £180,000

Description - click here to read

Two rare and severe disorders of insulin action – namely type B insulin resistance (TB-IR) and insulin autoimmune syndrome (IAS) - are caused by pathogenic antibodies against the insulin receptor (anti-INSR Abs) or insulin (anti-Ins Abs) respectively. TB-IR causes fulminant, acquired insulin resistance, while IAS causes postprandial hyperglycaemia and fasting hypoglycaemia. Each condition may arise in isolation, or may complicate pre-existing diabetes, and may be treated with multimodal immunosuppression. Milder forms of the conditions are often suspected in patients with insulin-treated diabetes and labile glycaemic control, for many of whom subcutaneous insulin infusion therapy is adopted. In this context, a major limitation of current diagnostics is the lack of a clinically accredited diagnostic test for TB-IR in the UK (or the USA), and the qualitative nature of existing anti-Ins Ab testing for IAS, which does not yield useful information about the likelihood that the antibody detected is altering insulin pharmacokinetics, compounded by the inability of most insulin immunoassays to detect analogue insulins. This project thus sets out to develop rapid, robust and quantitative biochemical assays for anti-Ins and anti-INSR Abs that yield clinically useful information, and to incorporate these into integrated clinical/laboratory diagnostic algorithms for brittle diabetes, IAS, severe IR and suspected interference in insulin immunoassay. These investigations will be directly translated into improved patient care, being made available nationally in the NHS via the laboratory supra-regional assay service (SAS) and the National Severe Insulin Resistance service.

2013

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Evaluating the role of the pancreatic beta-cell in the development of Cystic Fibrosis related diabetes

Recipient: Dr Catriona Kelly
Institution: Keele University
City: Keele
Amount: £14,600 

Description - click here to read

People with cystic fibrosis (CF) inherit a genetic defect that significantly shortens life-span. At present, approximately 9,000 people in the UK suffer from CF, and on average, do not live beyond their mid-30s. The genetic defect causes a build-up of thick and sticky secretions (for example, mucus in the lung), which affects the lungs and digestive tracts in particular. In the digestive tract, this causes high blood sugar levels and CF patients often develop diabetes (50% of patients over the age of 30 have diabetes). We do not know the cause, but the development of diabetes accelerates lung disease, which is the primary cause of death among CF patients. This study aims to find out what causes CF-related diabetes (CFRD) by examining the cells which regulate blood sugar levels. The study will not use animal or human tissue, but will create the first artificial CFRD cell model which will be used to study how the genetic defect increases blood sugar levels. This will be the first step in understanding how CFRD develops. By building on this initial investigation, we hope to identify how best to treat these patients to prevent the development of diabetes and increase life-expectancy.

2013

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Evaluation of a novel glucagon-incretin hybrid peptide for diabetes and obesity therapy

Recipient: Dr Victor Gault
Institution: University of Ulster
City: Ulster
Amount: £19,975

Description - click here to read
The worldwide increase in incidence of T2DM demands development of new drugs which are safe and more effective. Such drugs would also limit the risk of costly long-term complications, which ultimately will have a burden on the NHS. We have recently bioengineered a new drug molecule which acts to stimulate insulin secretion. Our preliminary data also indicate that this drug acts on three key hormones which are important therapeutic targets for treatment of diabetes. We now wish to establish long-term antidiabetic actions of this drug in animal models of T2DM in an attempt to bring forward a new class of agents that offers a safe and exciting therapeutic approach to diabetes-obesity.

2013

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Extra-cellular exosomal microRNA – a potential new class of urinary biomarker for diabetic kidney disease

Recipient: Dr James Dear
Institution: University of Edinburgh
City: Edinburgh
Amount: £16,125 

Description - click here to read

The kidney is often severely damaged by diabetes. Current tests only diagnose kidney problems when a lot of damage has already occurred. We need new tests that identify early damage and tell doctors something about the mechanism of injury. In urine there are particles called exosomes, packets of information released by kidney cells that change when the cells are injured. With DRWF funding we will develop a new method for counting human urinary exosomes and define their cargo. Armed with these crucial pilot data we can go forward and determine what exosomes tell us about diabetic kidney disease.

2013

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Non-invasive live imaging of immune infiltration into islets of Langerhans

Recipient: Professor Anne Cooke
Institution: University of Cambridge
City: Cambridge
Amount: £19,350

Description - click here to read

We are proposing a new way of visualising what happens to the insulin- producing islets of Langerhans when they become the target of an immune response that eventually leads to extensive beta-cell death and insulin dependent (type 1) diabetes. This method will allow us to see not only how immune cells gradually get into the islets, but also how the immune cells respond to various treatments that have been shown to delay diabetes development. It will also allow us to image how the immune system responds to islets grafted from genetically different donors and to grafts containing beta cell precursors differentiated from stem cells.

2013

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Plasma kisspeptin in pregnancy and gestational diabetes: a translational pilot study

Recipient: Dr James Bowe
Institution: King’s College London
City: London
Amount: £19,700 

Description - click here to read

Gestational diabetes (GDM) is raised blood glucose (sugar) levels occurring for the first time during pregnancy. GDM is associated with increased risk of adverse outcomes for mother and baby. We don’t really know why GDM occurs in some women. During pregnancy the body becomes more resistant to the effects of insulin (the hormone that controls blood glucose levels). During normal pregnancy the mother’s pancreas produces more insulin to compensate and blood glucose remains normal. The increase in insulin production occurs because the insulin-secreting β-cells in the islets of Langerhans in the pancreas both increase in number and release more insulin. GDM occurs when these processes are not enough to overcome the insulin resistance of pregnancy. Kisspeptin is a recently-discovered molecule that is found, along with its receptor, in the placenta and the pancreas. Kisspeptin increases in the blood during normal pregnancy due to massive release from the placenta. The function(s) of kisspeptin in the placenta and the pancreas are unknown. In my research in mice I showed that the kisspeptin receptor, GPR54, is found on β-cells and I demonstrated that kisspeptin increases insulin secretion. My research has suggested that, in pregnant mice, circulating kisspeptin is involved in β-cell responses to pregnancy, supporting islet function. These animal studies continue, but it is now important to examine whether these results translate to humans, as finding a role for kisspeptin in the function of human β-cells may lead to novel therapies for human diabetes. The proposed project is a translational pilot study to see if pregnant women with higher blood glucose levels have lower kisspeptin levels.

2021   2020   2019   2018   2017   2016   2015   2014   2013   2012   2011   
2010    2009   2008   2007   2006   2005   2004   2003   2002   2001   2000   1999

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