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 

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2016

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A comparison of the acute impact of high-intensity interval training (HIT), reduced-exertion high-intensity interval training (REHIT) and moderate-intensity continuous aerobic exercise (MICE) on free-living glycaemic control in type 2 diabetes

Recipient: Dr Richard Metcalfe
Institution: Ulster University
City: Ulster
Amount: £12,260

Description - click here to read

This research aims to determine whether a genuinely time-efficient exercise intervention is effective at improving the control of blood glucose in people with T2D. The exercise is based on high-intensity interval training (HIT), which utilises short bursts of vigorous exercise interspersed with periods of rest, but we have substantially reduced the number and length of the exercise intervals. Our protocol consists of 10-min of low intensity cycling with just two 20-second sprints in each session. Based on our previous work, this exercise mode is associated with low levels of exertion and fatigue, but is still effective at improving insulin function in sedentary men. However, it is not known if this type of exercise could improve blood glucose control in patients with T2D. We will: 1) investigate the effectiveness of this exercise to improve 24-hour glucose control; 2) compare the effects of this exercise mode with current exercise recommendations and another form of HIT; and 3) ask participants their perceptions of exertion, fatigue and enjoyment with each exercise mode.

2016

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Can residual beta-cell function predict glycaemic variability, inflammation and vascular repair at rest and after exercise in people with established type 1 diabetes?

Recipient: Dr Daniel West
Institution: Newcastle University
City: Newcastle
Amount: £19,470

Description - click here to read

When people with type 1 diabetes exercise, some experience hypoglycaemia, while others do not; in some HbA1c gets worse while in others it improves. Exercise is known to increase glucose variability leading to more time with high and low levels. It is now known that many people with long-standing type 1 diabetes can produce small amounts of insulin. It is unknown if this is important for limiting blood glucose variability at rest and around exercise. It is also unknown whether this low level of insulin impacts on important health markers such as how well blood vessels expand and shrink and how well the body can repair these vessels. We will examine the relationships between residual insulin production, glucose variability, blood vessel function and repair, inflammation and hypoglycaemia fear and incidence, at rest and after exercise. This will provide a foundation for larger studies which will look at how amount of residual insulin production could be used to predict the level of support people wishing to exercise may need.

2016

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CD4 T cell differentiation markers as predictors of type 1 diabetes development and progression

Recipient: Professor Lucy Walker
Institution: UCL Institute of Immunity & Transplantation
City: London
Amount: £20,000

Description - click here to read

Type 1 diabetes is caused by immune cells called T cells, however it has not been clear which type of T cell is involved. We believe that a better understanding of this area will ultimately permit the development of new therapies to target the errant T cells and interrupt disease. We have recently discovered that a particular type of T cell, the follicular helper T cell (TFH) is overrepresented in people with type 1 diabetes. We think that measuring these cells could represent a new way to gauge the autoimmune response in people with this condition. This would have important implications for our ability to assess whether particular therapies are working and perhaps even help us to determine how likely a person is to develop diabetes in the first place. The current application builds on our recent findings and will shed light on how the number of these TFH cells changes in individual patients over time both before and after type 1 diabetes development. 

2016

Prof David Matthews Vector White
The Professor David Matthews Non-Clinical Fellowship

Epigenetic changes in multi-generation type 1 diabetes families

Recipient: Dr Jody Ye
Institution: University of Bristol
City: Bristol
Amount: £179,774.00

Description - click here to read

Type 1 diabetes is caused when the immune system makes a mistake and destroys the insulin-secreting beta cells in the pancreas. We know that genes play an important role in causing the condition but factors in our environment such as viral infections, pre-natal environment, and early nutrition are also thought to be important. Over recent decades, the incidence of type 1 diabetes has increased rapidly (~3% annually especially in children under 5 years of age). In addition, more people with less type 1 diabetes associated genes develop the condition today compared with previous generations. This suggests the increasing importance of environmental effects in type 1 diabetes. Unlike genes that are usually inherited unchanged from parents, DNA itself can be chemically modified, a phenomenon called DNA methylation. This process has been shown to be changed by environmental exposures and can be different in one individual to another. My collaborator, Professor Yaron Tomer and his team at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York has already shown that methylation differences can be found in identical twins where one twin was affected by type 1 diabetes while the other was not. In my three-year fellowship, I will travel to Professor Tomer’s laboratory to study multi-generation type 1 diabetes families from the Bart’s Oxford (BOX) family study of type 1 diabetes which has been running for over 30 years. I am going to investigate whether DNA methylation has changed in children with type 1 diabetes compared with their parents and grandparents. This study will allow us to find out whether the changing environment over time is associated with the increasing incidence of diabetes by modifying our DNA. We hope that this research will identify new markers that can be used in clinical trials to more accurately assign disease risk. In addition, we will dissect the underlying molecular mechanisms to uncover why environmental exposures trigger changes to the immune system leading to beta cell death. In the longer term, if we can understand why type 1 diabetes is becoming more common we may be able to intervene to delay or prevent the condition.

2016

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The mechanisms linking glucose sensing to autophagic flux in pancreatic beta-cells

Recipient: Dr Catherine Arden
Institution: Newcastle University
City: Newcastle
Amount: £19,715

Description - click here to read
Type 2 diabetes (T2DM) occurs when the insulin-releasing beta-cells of the pancreas fail to secrete sufficient insulin, a consequence of decreased insulin release and decreased cell number. The purpose of the proposed work is to explore a role for autophagy in the regulation of beta-cell number. Autophagy is a recycling system that uses damaged cell components to provide energy in response to changes in fuel availability, and can either act to promote cell survival or cell death. The aim of the proposed study is to explore how beta-cells regulate autophagy in response to changes in glucose concentration. We will explore how beta-cells alter their cell recycling mechanism in response to both acute and chronic changes in glucose levels and investigate the cellular mechanisms involved. The data generated by this pilot study will provide the basis for future large scale grant applications investigating the molecular links between glucose-sensing and autophagy in beta-cells and how these pathways impact on beta-cell number in T2DM.

2016

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Understanding the relationship between lipid droplet pattern and mitochondrial function and morphology in human primary hepatocytes

Recipient: Professor Leanne Hodson
Institution: OCDEM
City: Oxford
Amount: £19,382

Description - click here to read

More people with type 2 diabetes have fatty liver disease than people without diabetes. Liver fat accumulation (steatosis) consists of either a large number of small (microsteatosis) or one large (macrosteatosis) fat (lipid) droplet within liver cells (hepatocytes). Large lipid droplets are thought to interfere with the part of the cell that produces energy (mitochondria) so that they don’t work efficiently. We will investigate the relationship between lipid droplets and mitochondrial function in human liver cells. Liver tissue will be obtained from patients undergoing surgery and from this hepatocytes will be isolated. We will then measure the size and number of the lipid droplets and their localisation to mitochondria, using a state-of-the-art automated imaging machine. We will also assess the health and function of the mitochondria by determining their ability to produce energy. This work will help us to understand the relationship between fat in the liver and mitochondrial function and also provide information about pathways that new drugs could be developed for to help to keep the liver healthy.


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