Lab-Grown Insulin Cells Reverse Diabetes in Mice, Swedish Scientists Announce
Stockholm, Sweden — Scientists at the Karolinska Institute have achieved a breakthrough in diabetes research, successfully reversing type 1 diabetes in mice using lab-grown insulin-producing cells derived from human stem cells. The engineered cells responded robustly to glucose and restored normal blood sugar control after transplantation, marking a significant step toward a potential cure for the disease.
“We have developed a more reliable method to generate functional insulin-producing beta cells from human pluripotent stem cells,” said lead researcher Dr. Emma Lindahl in a press release. “When transplanted into diabetic mice, these cells effectively regulated blood glucose levels within days.”
Background
Type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune condition where the body’s immune system destroys the insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas. Patients must rely on lifelong insulin injections to manage their blood sugar.

Previous attempts to create replacement cells from stem cells have struggled with low efficiency and poor glucose responsiveness. The Swedish team’s new protocol addresses these issues by refining the differentiation process to produce cells that closely mimic natural beta cells.
What This Means
If the results can be replicated in humans, it could pave the way for an unlimited supply of transplantable beta cells for type 1 diabetes patients. “This is a major advance, but we must remain cautious,” commented Dr. James Carter, a diabetes specialist at the University of Cambridge not involved in the study. “Moving from mouse models to clinical trials will take years of safety and efficacy testing.”
The Karolinska team plans to begin pre-clinical safety studies later this year, with human trials potentially starting within five years. While a complete cure remains distant, this research offers new hope for millions living with type 1 diabetes worldwide.
- Key achievement: Cells show strong glucose response and restore normoglycemia in mice.
- Next steps: Safety trials in larger animals, then human clinical trials.
- Significance: Could eliminate daily insulin injections for patients.
“This work represents a crucial proof-of-concept,” said Dr. Lindahl. “We have shown that lab-grown cells can perform the same function as natural beta cells. The challenge now is scaling production and ensuring long-term safety.”
The findings were published in the journal Nature Biotechnology. For more on stem cell therapies, see our related coverage on regenerative medicine advances.
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