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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Aldose reductase (AR), an enzyme in the polyol pathway, catalyzes the reduction of glucose to sorbitol. Sorbitol is subsequently converted to fructose by
sorbitol dehydrogenase
. The two enzymes constitute the sorbitol (polyol) pathway, the alternate route of glucose metabolism. The acceleration of this pathway and ensuing metabolic imbalances have been postulated to play a key role in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications. Using a transgenic animal model expressing human AR, we defined the primary role of this pathway in the development of functional and structural abnormalities elicited by
diabetes
. The inhibitors for AR would thus become effective therapeutic agents for diabetic complications. As AR is a member of the structurally related, NADPH-dependent aldo-keto reductase superfamily, other members of this family, coexisting with AR, may interact with the inhibitors to quench their action against AR. With our new immunoassay system, the levels of AR expressed in diabetic patients can be measured directly. The enzyme levels were significantly associated with the presence of complications, indicating that variable levels of AR expressed in diabetic individuals may affect the susceptibility or development of pathological changes associated with
diabetes
. In this review, recent advances in the understanding of the pathophysiological significance of AR are presented that would aid in the effective pharmacological intervention of diabetic complications.
...
PMID:[Aldose reductase in the polyol pathway: a potential target for the therapeutic intervention of diabetic complications]. 958 77
In this report, we made use of
sorbitol dehydrogenase
(
SDH
)-deficient mutant mice (C57BL/LiA) to test whether there is a close correlation between the level of polyol accumulation and the degree of reduction in motor nerve conduction velocity (MNCV) associated with
diabetes
. The C57BL/LiA mouse has
SDH
deficiency due to a G-to-A mutation at the +1 position of intron 8, thus producing only aberrant
SDH
transcripts. These C57BL/LiA mice should have higher levels of polyol accumulation in the peripheral nerve because of the inability to further metabolize sorbitol to fructose. Here, we confirm by Western blot analysis and high-performance liquid chromatography that these mice lack
SDH
in the sciatic nerve and other various tissues, whereas normal mice possess
SDH
. These C57BL/LiA mice do not display any obvious phenotype that includes peripheral neuropathy in the normal laboratory environment and breed normally as described previously, although the tissues that normally contain
SDH
accumulate more sorbitol. This finding suggested that C57BL/LiA mouse strain is a valid model for studying the role in diabetic neuropathy of the polyol pathway, which consists of two enzymes-aldose reductase for converting glucose to sorbitol and
SDH
for converting sorbitol to fructose. Sorbitol levels in the sciatic nerve of diabetic C57BL/10N, nondiabetic, and diabetic C57BL/LiA mice were increased 4.3-, 16.6-, and 38.1-fold, respectively, above that of nondiabetic C57BL/10N. The fructose level in the sciatic nerve was increased 2.4-fold in diabetic C57BL/10N mice compared with that of nondiabetic and diabetic C57BL/LiA mice. Diabetic
SDH
-deficient mice showed an MNCV reduction similar in magnitude to that of diabetic C57BL/10N mice, despite greater nerve sorbitol accumulation and the lack of fructose in the former. The present data suggest that the levels of sorbitol and fructose in the sciatic nerve of mice do not correlate with the severity of MNCV deficit associated with
diabetes
.
Diabetes
1998 Jun
PMID:Effects of sorbitol dehydrogenase deficiency on nerve conduction in experimental diabetic mice. 960 75
In experimental diabetic neuropathy, defective arachidonic acid metabolism characterized by a decrease in the proportion of glycerophospholipid arachidonoyl-containing molecular species (ACMS) occurs and has been implicated in the pathogenesis of the disorder. In this study, we evaluated the suitability of a tumor-derived human Schwann cell line (NF1T) as a model to investigate the mechanism underlying the loss of ACMS. NF1T cells grown in 30 versus 5.5 mM glucose undergo a marked reduction in ACMS in phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidylethanolamine, and phosphatidylinositol, in a manner resembling that of diabetic nerve. The depletion of ACMS can be reversed on transferring the cells from 30 mM glucose to medium containing physiological levels of glucose. Cells maintained in 5.5 mM glucose plus 25 mM mannitol or sorbitol did not exhibit decreased ACMS levels, indicating that osmotic effects were not responsible for ACMS depletion. However, growth in 25 mM fructose elicited a reduction of ACMS similar to that produced by 30 mM glucose. Excessive glucose flux through the polyol pathway has been implicated in the neural and vascular abnormalities associated with
diabetes
. Therefore, we examined the effects of polyol pathway inhibitors, including two aldose reductase inhibitors, zopolrestat and sorbinil, and a
sorbitol dehydrogenase
inhibitor (SDI), CP166,572, on ACMS levels in NF1T cells cultured in elevated glucose concentrations. At 200 microM, zopolrestat fully and sorbinil partially corrected ACMS depletion. The SDI at concentrations up to 100 microM failed to affect diminished ACMS levels. Neither zopolrestat nor the SDI restored ACMS levels reduced in the presence of elevated fructose concentrations. These findings suggest that enhanced flux through the polyol pathway and, in particular, elevated aldose reductase activity may play a significant role in the reduction of ACMS levels in the cells brought about by elevated glucose levels.
...
PMID:Depletion of phospholipid arachidonoyl-containing molecular species in a human Schwann cell line grown in elevated glucose and their restoration by an aldose reductase inhibitor. 968 69
Several recent studies with the
sorbitol dehydrogenase
inhibitors 4-[4-(N,N-dimethylsulfamoyl)-piperazino]-2-methylpyrimidine, SDH-1, and its active metabolite 4-[4-(N, N-dimethylsulfamoyl)piperazino]-2-hydroxymethylpyrimidine , SDH-2, suggest that inhibition of
sorbitol dehydrogenase
may be beneficial in delaying the onset of diabetic complications due to their ability to ameliorate redox changes associated with polyol metabolism. To compare the relative importance of
sorbitol dehydrogenase
versus aldose reductase inhibition on sugar cataract formation, cataract formation was monitored in 50% galactose-fed and diabetic rats treated with/without the
sorbitol dehydrogenase
inhibitors SDH-1 or SDH-2 or the aldose reductase inhibitors AL 1576 or Ponalrestat. For these studies,
diabetes
was induced in young 50 g rats with streptozotocin while galactosemia was produced by feeding a diet containing 50% galactose. Inhibitors were administered in the diet with the diet containing 0.06% (w/w) of the
sorbitol dehydrogenase
inhibitors or Ponalrestat, and 0.0125% (w/w) of AL 1576. Cataract formation was monitored by hand-held slit lamp and polyol levels were measured by gas chromatography. Sugar cataract formation was accelerated in diabetic rats treated with
sorbitol dehydrogenase
inhibitors while no difference in cataract formation was observed in galactose-fed rats treated with/without SDH inhibitors. Cataract formation was inhibited in both diabetic and galactosemic rats by either Ponalrestat or AL 1576. These results support the concept that sugar cataract formation is initiated by the aldose reductase catalysed intracellular accumulation of polyols and that these sugar cataracts can be prevented through inhibition of aldose reductase.
...
PMID:Effect of sorbitol dehydrogenase inhibition on sugar cataract formation in galactose-fed and diabetic rats. 973 86
Sorbitol accumulation plays an important role in diabetic complications involving the kidney, nerves, retina, lens and cardiac muscle. To investigate the influence of thyroid hormone on the sorbitol pathway, we studied the effects of thyroid hormone on polyol metabolism in normal and diabetic rats. Rats were divided into three groups: controls, streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic euthyroid rats (DM) and STZ-induced diabetic hyperthyroid (thyroxine-injected) rats (DM+HT). The sorbitol (Sor) concentrations in the kidney, liver and sciatic nerve (2.53+/-0.74, 0.97+/-0.16 and 24.0+/-5.1 nmol/mg protein, respectively) of the DM rats were significantly higher than those (1.48+/-0.31, 0.58+/-0.13 and 3. 1+/-0.6 nmol/mg protein) of the control rats. The Sor concentrations in the kidney and sciatic nerve of the DM+HT rats (1.26+/-0.29 and 9. 40+/-1.2 nmol/mg protein) were significantly lower than those in the DM rats. These values were reduced in the liver, unchanged in the kidney, and increased in the sciatic nerve from the hyperthyroid rats without
diabetes
. Thyroid hormone reduced the aldose reductase (AR) activities in the kidney, liver and sciatic nerve of the DM rats, and similarly reduced AR in the kidney and liver, but not in the sciatic nerve, of the non-diabetic rats. The
sorbitol dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) activities were decreased by thyroid hormone in the kidney and liver but not the sciatic nerve of DM rats. In the non-diabetic rats, this enzyme activity was decreased in liver, but not in kidney or sciatic nerve. A positive correlation between the Sor concentration and AR activity was observed in the kidney and liver but not in the sciatic nerve from control, DM and DM+HT rats. A negative correlation was observed between the Sor concentration and
SDH
activities in the same organs. These data suggest that thyroid hormone affects the sorbitol pathway, but the detailed mechanism whereby this hormone reduces the sorbitol content (especially in diabetic rats) remains to be clarified.
...
PMID:Effects of thyroid hormone on the sorbitol pathway in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. 983 21
Thanks to progress in zinc research, it is now possible to describe in more detail how zinc ions (Zn++) and nitrogen monoxide (NO), together with glutathione (GSH) and its oxidized form, GSSG, help to regulate immune responses to antigens. NO appears to be able to liberate Zn++ from metallothionein (MT), an intracellular storage molecule for metal ions such as zinc (Zn++) and copper (Cu++). Both Zn++ and Cu++ show a concentration-dependent inactivation of a protease essential for the proliferation of the AIDS virus HIV-1, while zinc can help prevent
diabetes
complications through its intracellular activation of the enzyme
sorbitol dehydrogenase
(
SDH
). A Zn++ deficiency can lead to a premature transition from efficient Th1-dependent cellular antiviral immune functions to Th2-dependent humoral immune functions. Deficiencies of Zn++, NO and/or GSH shift the Th1/Th2 balance towards Th2, as do deficiencies of any of the essential nutrients (ENs) - a group that includes methionine, cysteine, arginine, vitamins A, B, C and E, zinc and selenium (Se) - because these are necessary for the synthesis and maintenance of sufficient amounts of GSH, MT and NO. Via the Th1/Th2 balance, Zn++, NO, MT and GSH collectively determine the progress and outcome of many diseases. Disregulation of the Th1/Th2 balance is responsible for autoimmune disorders such as
diabetes mellitus
. Under Th2, levels of interleukin-4 (II-4), II-6, II-10, leukotriene B4 (LTB4) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) are raised, while levels of II-2, Zn++, NO and other substances are lowered. This makes things easier for viruses like HIV-1 which multiply in Th2 cells but rarely, if ever, in Th1 cells. AIDS viruses (HIVs) enter immune cells with the aid of the CD4 cell surface receptor in combination with a number of co-receptors which include CCR3, CCR5 and CXCR4. Remarkably, the cell surface receptor for LTB4 (BLTR) also seems to act as a co-receptor for CD4, which helps HIVs to infect immune cells. The Th2 cytokine II-4 increases the number of CXCR4 and BLTR co-receptors, as a result of which, under Th2, the HIV strains that infect immune cells are precisely those that are best able to accelerate the AIDS disease process. The II-4 released under Th2 therefore not only promotes the production of more HIVs and the rate at which they infect immune cells, it also stimulates selection for the more virulent strains. Zn++ inhibit LTB4 production and numbers of LTB4 receptors (BLTRs) in a concentration-dependent way. Zn++ help cells to keep their LTB4 'doors' shut against the more virulent strains of HIV. Moreover, a sufficiency of Zn++ and NO prevents a shift of the Th1/Th2 balance towards Th2 and thereby slows the proliferation of HIV, which it also does by inactivating the HIV protease. Research makes it look likely that deficiencies of ENs such as zinc promote the proliferation of Th2 cells at the expense of Th1 cells. Zinc deficiency also promotes cancer. Under the influence of Th1 cells, zinc inhibits the growth of tumours by activating the endogenous tumour-suppressor endostatin, which inhibits angiogenesis. The modern Western diet, with its excess of refined products such as sugar, alcohol and fats, often contains, per calorie, a deficiency of ENs such as zinc, selenium and vitamins A, B, C and E, which results in disturbed immune functions, a shifted Th1/Th2 balance, chronic (viral) infections, obesity, atherosclerosis, autoimmunity, allergies and cancer. In view of this, an optimization of dietary composition would seem to give the best chance of beating (viral) epidemics and common (chronic) diseases at a realistic price.
...
PMID:Modern diets and diseases: NO-zinc balance. Under Th1, zinc and nitrogen monoxide (NO) collectively protect against viruses, AIDS, autoimmunity, diabetes, allergies, asthma, infectious diseases, atherosclerosis and cancer. 1049 17
Diabetes
is known to potentiate thioacetamide (TA)-induced liver injury via enhanced bioactivation. Little attention has been given to the role of compensatory tissue repair on ultimate outcome of hepatic injury in
diabetes
. The objective of this study was to investigate the effect of
diabetes
on TA-induced liver injury and lethality and to investigate the underlying mechanisms. We hypothesized that hepatotoxicity of TA in diabetic rats would increase due to enhanced bioactivation-mediated liver injury and also due to compromised compensatory tissue repair, consequently making a nonlethal dose of TA lethal. On day 0, male Sprague-Dawley rats (250-300 g) were injected with streptozotocin (STZ, 60 mg/kg ip) to induce
diabetes
. On day 10 the STZ-induced diabetic rats and the nondiabetic rats received a single dose of TA (300 mg/kg ip). This normally nonlethal dose of TA caused 90% mortality in the STZ-induced diabetic rats. At various times (0-60 h) after TA administration, liver injury was assessed by plasma alanine aminotransferase (ALT),
sorbitol dehydrogenase
(
SDH
), and liver histopathology. Liver function was evaluated by plasma bilirubin. Cell proliferation and tissue repair were evaluated by [(3)H]thymidine ((3)H-T) incorporation and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) assays. In the nondiabetic rat, liver necrosis peaked at 24 h and declined thereafter toward normal by 60 h. In the STZ-induced diabetic rat, however, liver necrosis was significantly increased from 12 h onward and progressed, culminating in liver failure and death. Liver tissue repair studies showed that, in the liver of nondiabetic rats, S-phase DNA synthesis was increased at 36 h and peaked at 48 h following TA administration. However, DNA synthesis was approximately 50% inhibited in the liver of diabetic rats. PCNA study showed a corresponding decrease of cell-cycle progression, indicating that the compensatory tissue repair was sluggish in the diabetic rats. Further investigation of tissue repair by employing equitoxic doses (300 mg TA/kg in the non-diabetic rats; 30 mg TA/kg in the diabetic rats) revealed that, despite equal injury up to 24 h following injection, the tissue repair response in the diabetic rats was much delayed. The compromised tissue repair prolonged liver injury in the diabetic rats. These studies suggest that the increased TA hepatotoxicity in the diabetic rat is due to combined effects of increased bioactivation-mediated liver injury of TA and compromised compensatory tissue repair.
...
PMID:Enhanced hepatotoxicity and toxic outcome of thioacetamide in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. 1089 50
Diabetes
-induced changes in retinal metabolism and function have been linked to increased aldose reductase activity, hypoxia or 'pseudohypoxia' (increase in NADH/NAD+ attributed to increased
sorbitol dehydrogenase
activity). To address this controversy, we evaluated the effects of two vasoactive compounds, alpha(1)-adrenoceptor antagonist prazosin and antioxidant DL-alpha-lipoic acid, as well as
sorbitol dehydrogenase
inhibitor (SDI-157) and aldose reductase inhibitor (sorbinil) on retinal free mitochondrial and cytosolic NAD+/NADH ratios in streptozotocin-diabetic rats.
Diabetes
-induced decrease in mitochondrial and cytosolic NAD+/NADH ratios was completely or partially corrected by prazosin and DL-alpha-lipoic acid (despite the fact that prazosin did not affect and DL-alpha-lipoic acid even further increased sorbitol pathway activity) as well as by sorbinil, whereas SDI-157 was totally ineffective. Hypoxia-like metabolic changes in the diabetic retina originate from aldose reductase, but not
sorbitol dehydrogenase
activity.
...
PMID:Diabetes-induced changes in retinal NAD-redox status: pharmacological modulation and implications for pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy. 1128 19
The relationship between the polyol pathway and sugar cataracts has been studied extensively using streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats and galactose fed rats as animal models for insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM). In these models, sugar cataracts progress quickly, leading to rapid lenticular polyol accumulation in the early stages of cataract formation. In 1992, a new animal model of non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM), the Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty (OLETF) rat, was established. In the present study, we examined both biochemical and morphological changes in the lenses of the OLETF rats to determine whether these changes reflect those associated with diabetic cataract formation and to clarify their relationship with the polyol pathway. For the biochemical analysis, we measured the enzyme activity of aldose reductase (AR) and
sorbitol dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) and the sorbitol levels using 20, 40 and 60 week old OLETF or control Long-Evans Tokushima Otsuka (LETO) rats. Enzyme activities of AR and
SDH
, which were lower in 20 week old OLETF rats than in LETO rats, were increased in 60 week old OLETF rats. The lenticular sorbitol level of the OLETF rats was similar to the control level at 20 weeks of age, but it was markedly increased at 40 weeks of age, and slightly decreased at 60 weeks of age compared with rats at 40 weeks but not compared with controls. Slight lens fiber swelling was observed in the anterior and/or posterior subcapsular regions of 40 week old OLETF rats, accompanying elevated sorbitol level and slightly increased
SDH
activity in the lens. Swelling and liquefaction of lens fibers were observed in the subcapsular and supranuclear region of 60 week old OLETF rats, as well as decreased lenticular sorbitol, and markedly increased
SDH
activity compared with rats at 40 weeks. AR activity was also increased causing the elevation of sorbitol in lenses of OLETF rats during the early stages of cataract formation. Despite differences in the etiology of
diabetes mellitus
, the strain of rat and the rate of disease progression in the OLETF rat model compared with other diabetic models, the present results support the theory that the polyol pathway via AR is a factor in the development of sugar cataracts.
...
PMID:Biochemical and morphological changes during development of sugar cataract in Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima fatty (OLETF) rat. 1152 Jan 12
Aldose reductase (AR) and
sorbitol dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) are the enzymes constituting the polyol pathway, an alternate route of glucose metabolism. A wealth of experimental data has indicated the involvement of the polyol pathway in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications. However, there has been surprisingly little research on the relative abundance of
SDH
to AR in the tissues affected in
diabetes
. We therefore developed a competitive RT-PCR system to simultaneously determine the mRNA levels of these two enzymes in small amounts of samples, and studied their expression in Schwann cells isolated from adult rat sciatic nerves. Although both AR and
SDH
mRNA were expressed in the Schwann cells, the levels of
SDH
cDNA were much lower than those of AR cDNA. The induction of AR mRNA expression in the Schwann cells under hyperosmotic conditions was similarly detected by Northern blot analysis and our competitive RT-PCR method. The RT-PCR system developed in this study may be a useful tool in ascertaining the relative contributions of AR and
SDH
to the metabolic derangements resulting from the acceleration of polyol pathway activity in the target organ of diabetic complications.
...
PMID:Analysis of gene expression of aldose reductase and sorbitol dehydrogenase in rat Schwann cells by competitive RT-PCR method using non-homologous DNA standards. 1173 99
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