
Breakthrough in search for Type 1 diabetes cure
A cure for Type 1 diabetes is a step closer after scientists managed to halt the condition for six months thanks to insulin-producing cells.
Sarah Johnson, head of policy at the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation which co-funded the research, told the Today programme how the research involved wrapping human beta cells - which produce insulin - in a product derived from brown algae and implanting them in mice.
The mice have had restoration of perfect blood glucose levels for six months, she told presenter Justin Webb.
Duration:
This clip is from
More clips from 26/01/2016
-
Communists in the 大象传媒?
Duration: 00:19
-
Vote Leave: EU 'will do a deal' with UK after exit
Duration: 04:39
-
Orhan Pamuk's Museum of Innocence
Duration: 05:18
-
Kitty in Boots: Who is the new Beatrix Potter character?
Duration: 06:52
More clips from Today
-
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie: AI will make us 'increasingly stupid'
Duration: 07:52
-
Crumbling Germany - why 'it's a bit broken'
Duration: 08:50
-
Met chief: New rules needed 'in weeks' to sack rogue officers
Duration: 12:16
-
Tom Kingston's family call for antidepressant change
Duration: 15:48