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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An increased expression and secretion of angiogenic growth factors was proposed to occur in proliferative diabetic retinopathy and other neovascularizing retinal diseases. However, a loss of anti-angiogenic factors also might promote retinal neovascularization. Therefore we investigated the active and latent vitreous levels of the subtypes of the endothelial anti-mitogen
transforming growth factor-beta
in vitreous of 58 patients. Four groups of patients were compared: Controls without retinal hypoxia, patients with quiescent and active proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR), and patients with severe retinal hypoxia resulting in rubeosis iridis. Whereas the amount of total TGF-beta in the four groups did not differ significantly, latent TGF-beta isoform expression showed complex alterations in ocular vitreous. Levels of active TGF-beta of patients with active PDR (79.5 +/- 28 pg/ml; n = 8) were decreased to 20% of the control levels (378 +/- 55 pg/ml; n = 12; p = 0.0005) and 25% of the mean concentration in quiescent PDR (346 +/- 64 pg/ml; n = 9; p = 0.0021). Levels in rubeosis (52 +/- 10 pg/ml; n = 10) did not differ significantly from those found in active PDR but were decreased to 15% of those in patients with quiescent PDR (p = 0.0004). Furthermore a highly significant inverse correlation between active TGF-beta and alpha2-antiplasmin, a liver produced inhibitor of the activation of TGF-beta by plasmin was noted (r = -0.59; n = 28; p = 0.001). We conclude that deficient activation of TGF-beta occurs in active proliferative diabetic retinopathy and in hypoxic angiogenesis most likely as a consequence of a blood retina barrier breakdown and influx of alpha2-antiplasmin from serum. The disinhibition of endothelial cell proliferation may be a central component in the process of neovascularization.
Exp Clin Endocrinol
Diabetes
1999
PMID:Deficient activation and different expression of transforming growth factor-beta isoforms in active proliferative diabetic retinopathy and neovascular eye disease. 1007 51
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a T cell-dependent chronic inflammatory disease of the central nervous system. The role of chemokines in MS and its different stages is uncertain. Recent data suggest a bias in expression of chemokine receptors by Th1 vs. Th2 cells; human Th1 clones express CXCR3 and CCR5 and Th2 clones express CCR3 and CCR4. Chemokine receptors expressed by Th1 cells may be important in MS, as increased interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) precedes clinical attacks, and IFN-gamma injection induces disease exacerbations. We found CXCR3(+) T cells increased in blood of relapsing-remitting MS, and both CCR5(+) and CXCR3(+) T cells increased in progressive MS compared with controls. Furthermore, peripheral blood CCR5(+) T cells secreted high levels of IFN-gamma. In the brain, the CCR5 ligand, MIP-1alpha, was strongly associated with microglia/macrophages, and the CXCR3 ligand, IP-10, was expressed by astrocytes in MS lesions but not unaffected white matter of control or MS subjects. Areas of plaque formation were infiltrated by CCR5-expressing and, to a lesser extent, CXCR3-expressing cells; Interleukin (IL)-18 and IFN-gamma were expressed in demyelinating lesions. No leukocyte expression of CCR3, CCR4, or six other chemokines, or anti-inflammatory cytokines IL-5, IL-10, IL-13, and
transforming growth factor-beta
was observed. Thus, chemokine receptor expression may be used for immunologic staging of MS and potentially for other chronic autoimmune/inflammatory processes such as rheumatoid arthritis, autoimmune
diabetes
, or chronic transplant rejection. Furthermore, these results provide a rationale for the use of agents that block CCR5 and/or CXCR3 as a therapeutic approach in the treatment of MS.
...
PMID:CCR5(+) and CXCR3(+) T cells are increased in multiple sclerosis and their ligands MIP-1alpha and IP-10 are expressed in demyelinating brain lesions. 1035 6
Altered growth of renal cells is one of the early abnormalities detected after the onset of
diabetes
. Cell culture studies whereby renal cells are exposed to high glucose concentrations have provided a considerable amount of insight into mechanisms of growth. In the glomerular compartment, there is a very early and self-limited proliferation of mesangial cells with subsequent hypertrophy, whereas proximal tubular cells primarily undergo hypertrophy. There is overwhelming evidence from in vivo and cell culture studies that induction of the
transforming growth factor-beta
(
TGF-beta
) system mediates the actions of high ambient glucose and that this system is pivotal for the hypertrophy of mesangial and tubular cells. Other factors such as hemodynamic forces, protein glycation products, and several mediators (for example, angiotensin II, endothelin-1, thromboxane, and platelet-derived growth factor) may further amplify the synthesis of
TGF-beta
and/or the expression of its receptors in the diabetic state. Cellular hypertrophy can be characterized by cell cycle arrest in the G1 phase. The molecular mechanism arresting mesangial cells in the G1 phase of the cell cycle is the induction of cyclin-dependent kinase (CdK) inhibitors such as p27Kip1 and p21, which bind to and inactivate cyclin-CdK complexes responsible for G1-phase exit. High-glucose-induced activation of protein kinase C and stimulated
TGF-beta
expression appear to be essential for stimulated expression of p27Kip1. In addition, a decreased turnover of protein caused by the inhibition of proteases contributes to hypertrophy. The development of irreversible renal changes in
diabetes mellitus
such as glomerulosclerosis and tubulointerstitial fibrosis is always preceded by the early hypertrophic processes in the glomerular and the tubular compartments. It may still be debated whether diabetic renal hypertrophy will inevitably lead to irreversible fibrotic changes in the absence of other factors such as altered intraglomerular hemodynamics and genetic predisposition. Nevertheless, understanding cellular growth on a molecular level may help design a novel therapeutic approach to prevent or treat diabetic nephropathy effectively.
...
PMID:Molecular mechanisms of diabetic renal hypertrophy. 1043 77
Restoration of peripheral tolerance to target autoantigens during autoimmune diseases has met with several limitations because of the limited efficacy of this approach in an already immune host. To optimize the induction of tolerance, we have shown that feeding insulin conjugated to cholera toxin B-subunit (CTB), a potent mucosal adjuvant, reduced by 5,000 the amounts of antigen necessary for delaying
diabetes
onset in NOD mice. To analyze these protective mechanisms, we have performed cotransfer experiments using splenocytes from young females fed once with 10 microg of CTB-insulin, mixed with diabetogenic T-cells, and intravenously injected into irradiated syngeneic male recipients. We demonstrated that the delayed onset of
diabetes
relied on CD4+ T-cells. We studied the cytokine production from plate-bound anti-CD3-stimulated cells. Higher interleukin (IL)-4 amounts were observed in both splenocytes and pancreatic lymph node (PLN) cell cultures from CTB-insulin-fed mice as soon as 4 h after the feeding. An increase in the levels of
transforming growth factor-beta
was seen after 24 h only in the mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN). In both of these organs, a reduction of gamma-interferon (IFN-gamma) production occurred after CTB-insulin treatment, at 24 h in the PLN and at 7 days in the MLN. Reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis indicated an increase in the level of IL-4 and a reduction in IFN-gamma transcripts in the PLN of mice treated orally with CTB-insulin and of the recipients of regulatory T-cells. Using different strains of congenic NOD mice at the Thy1 locus, we showed that protection was associated with the accumulation of T-cells from CTB-insulin-fed mice in the lymph nodes from draining sites containing functional islets, i.e., the PLN in normal mice and the renal lymph nodes after a syngeneic islet graft under the kidney capsule of streptozotocin-treated mice. Taken together, our results clearly indicate that oral administration of CTB-insulin conjugates in NOD mice produced a shift from a T-helper type 1 to a type 2 profile with the induction of antigen-specific regulatory CD4+ T-cells in the vicinity of the mucosal barrier and close to the inflamed islets.
Diabetes
1999 Nov
PMID:Oral administration of cholera toxin B-insulin conjugates protects NOD mice from autoimmune diabetes by inducing CD4+ regulatory T-cells. 1053 48
Although the glomerulus, particularly the mesangium, has been the focus of intense investigation in
diabetes
, tubulointerstitial injury is also a major feature of diabetic nephropathy and an important predictor of renal dysfunction. The renal tubule in
diabetes
is subject to both direct and indirect pathogenetic influences as a consequence of its position in the nephron and its resorptive function. On exposure to glucose, proximal tubular cells elaborate vasoactive hormones, including angiotensin II and injurious cytokines such as
transforming growth factor-beta
(
TGF-beta
), as well as extracellular matrix proteins. In turn, angiotensin II may further increase
TGF-beta
expression in both proximal tubular and interstitial cells, thus amplifying the stimulus to fibrogenesis in the renal tubulointerstitium. In addition to these mostly direct influences, the renal tubule, particularly its proximal segment, is exposed to glomerular effluent. In the diabetic state, this includes large quantities of advanced glycation end products and glucose and, at later stages in the evolution of diabetic nephropathy, protein, all of which are factors that may induce
TGF-beta
expression and fibrosis. Diabetic nephropathy should therefore be viewed as a disease affecting the entire nephron. Continued exploration into tubulointerstitial disease in addition to glomerular injury in
diabetes
may help provide further insights into the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy and additional targets for therapeutic intervention.
...
PMID:The tubulointerstitium in progressive diabetic kidney disease: more than an aftermath of glomerular injury? 1057 71
Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) is a peptide secreted by cultured endothelial cells and fibroblasts when stimulated by
transforming growth factor-beta
(
TGF-beta
), and is overexpressed during fibrotic processes in coronary arteries and in skin. To determine whether CTGF is implicated in the pathogenesis of diabetic glomerulosclerosis, cultured rat mesangial cells (MC) as well as kidney cortex and microdissected glomeruli were examined from obese, diabetic db/db mice and their normal counterparts. Exposure of MC to recombinant human CTGF significantly increased fibronectin and collagen type I production. Furthermore, unstimulated MC expressed low levels of CTGF message and secreted minimal amounts of CTGF protein (36 to 38 kD) into the media. However, sodium heparin treatment resulted in a greater than fourfold increase in media-associated CTGF, suggesting that the majority of CTGF produced was cell- or matrix-bound. Exposure of MC to
TGF-beta
, increased glucose concentrations, or cyclic mechanical strain, all causal factors in diabetic glomerulosclerosis, markedly induced the expression of CTGF transcripts, while recombinant human CTGF was able to autoinduce its own expression. TGF-, and high glucose, but not mechanical strain, stimulated the concomitant secretion of CTGF protein, the former also inducing abundant quantities of a small molecular weight form of CTGF (18 kD) containing the heparin-binding domain. The induction of CTGF protein by a high glucose concentration was mediated by
TGF-beta
, since a
TGF-beta
-neutralizing antibody blocked this stimulation. In vivo studies using quantitative reverse transcription-PCR demonstrated that although CTGF transcripts were low in the glomeruli of control mice, expression was increased 28-fold after approximately 3.5 mo of
diabetes
. This change occurred early in the course of diabetic nephropathy when mesangial expansion was mild, and interstitial disease and proteinuria were absent. A substantially reduced elevation of CTGF mRNA (twofold) observed in whole kidney cortices indicated that the primary alteration of CTGF expression was in the glomerulus. These results suggest that CTGF upregulation is an important factor in the pathogenesis of mesangial matrix accumulation and progressive glomerulosclerosis, acting downstream of
TGF-beta
.
...
PMID:Regulation of connective tissue growth factor activity in cultured rat mesangial cells and its expression in experimental diabetic glomerulosclerosis. 1061 37
Vascular hypertrophy, a feature of experimental and human
diabetes
, has been implicated in the pathogenesis of the microvascular and macrovascular complications of the disease. In the present study, we sought to examine the role of endogenous endothelin and its relation to vascular growth factors in the mediation of vascular hypertrophy in experimental
diabetes
and to examine the contribution of mast cells to this process. Vessel morphology, endothelin, growth factor gene expression, and matrix deposition were studied in the mesenteric arteries of control and streptozotocin-induced diabetic Sprague-Dawley rats treated with or without the dual endothelin(A/B) receptor antagonist bosentan (100 mg x kg(-1) x d(-1)) during a 3-week period. Compared with control animals, diabetic animals had significant increases in vessel weight, wall-to-lumen ratio, mast cell infiltration, extracellular matrix deposition, and gene expression of epidermal growth factor (EGF) and
transforming growth factor-beta
(1). In diabetic, but not control, vessels, not only were EGF mRNA and endothelin present in endothelial cells, but also their expression was observed in adventitial mast cells. Immunoreactive endothelin was present in the media of mesenteric vessels of diabetic, but not control, animals. Bosentan treatment significantly reduced mesenteric weight, wall-to-lumen ratio, mast cell infiltration, matrix deposition, and EGF mRNA but did not prevent the overexpression of
transforming growth factor-beta
(1) mRNA in diabetic rats. These findings suggest that endogenous endothelin and EGF may play a role in
diabetes
-induced vascular hypertrophy and that mast cells may be pathogenetically involved in this process.
...
PMID:Endothelin receptor antagonism ameliorates mast cell infiltration, vascular hypertrophy, and epidermal growth factor expression in experimental diabetes. 1066 11
Diabetic nephropathy is the leading cause of end-stage renal disease in the United States and is a major contributing cause of morbidity and mortality in patients with
diabetes
. Despite conventional therapy to improve glycemic and blood pressure control the incidence of diabetic nephropathy is reaching epidemic proportions worldwide. As the major pathologic feature of diabetic nephropathy is diffuse mesangial matrix expansion, the pro-sclerotic cytokine
transforming growth factor-beta
, TGF-beta, is a leading candidate to mediate the progression of the disease. Numerous studies have now demonstrated that TGF-beta is a key factor in experimental models of diabetic kidney disease as well as in patients with diabetic nephropathy. Recent studies have begun to explore the mechanisms by which TGF-beta is stimulated by high glucose and how TGF-beta exerts its matrix-stimulating effects on renal cells. TGF-beta may also be involved in mediating the vascular dysfunction of diabetic kidney disease via its effects on the key intracellular calcium channel, the inositol trisphosphate receptor (IP(3)R). As there is substantial evidence for a cause and effect relationship between upregulation of TGF-beta and the progression of diabetic kidney disease, future studies will seek to establish specific targets along these pathways at which to intervene.
...
PMID:TGF-beta in diabetic kidney disease: role of novel signaling pathways. 1070 59
Amadori-glycated albumin in diabetic nephropathy: Pathophysiologic connections. Nonenzymatic glycation of proteins represents a major mechanism by which hyperglycemia leads to diabetic renal disease. Recent research has shown that Amadori-modified albumin, the principal glycated protein in plasma, elicits pathobiologic effects in cultured renal cells that are identical to those of high ambient glucose. When added to the incubation media of glomerular mesangial and endothelial cells, glycated albumin stimulates protein kinase C (PKC) activity, increases
transforming growth factor-beta
(
TGF-beta
) bioactivity, and induces gene overexpression and enhanced production of extracellular matrix proteins. These cellular events, whereby PKC-mediated
TGF-beta
activation leads to increased matrix expression, are inextricably linked, and they form the central tenets of a pathophysiologic connection between glycated proteins and diabetic nephropathy. In vivo studies further corroborate the role of glycated proteins in the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy. Reduction or neutralization of glycated albumin in the db/db mouse model of type 2 diabetes significantly ameliorates the proteinuria, renal insufficiency, mesangial expansion, and overexpression of matrix proteins. In human type 1 diabetes, the plasma-glycated albumin concentration is independently associated with the presence of nephropathy. Abrogating the biologic effects of increased glycated albumin has novel therapeutic potential in the management of renal complications in
diabetes
.
...
PMID:Amadori-glycated albumin in diabetic nephropathy: pathophysiologic connections. 1099 89
Considerable evidence suggests that the intrarenal renin-angiotensin system plays an important role in diabetic nephropathy. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors and angiotensin II (Ang II) receptor blockers (ARBs) can attenuate progressive glomerulosclerosis in disease models and can slow disease progression in humans. Because agents that interfere with Ang II action may decrease glomerular injury without altering glomerular pressures, it has been suggested that Ang II has direct effects on glomerular cells to induce sclerosis independent of its hemodynamic actions. To study nonhemodynamic effects of Ang II on matrix metabolism, many investigators have used cell culture systems. Glucose and Ang II have been shown to produce similar effects on renal cells in culture. For instance, incubation of mesangial cells in high-glucose media or in the presence of Ang II stimulates matrix protein synthesis and inhibits degradative enzyme (e.g., collagenase, plasmin) activity. Glucose and Ang II also can inhibit proximal tubule proteinases. Glucose increases expression of the angiotensinogen gene in proximal tubule cells and Ang II production in primary mesangial cell culture, which indicates that high glucose itself can activate the renin-angiotensin system. The effects of glucose and Ang II on mesangial matrix metabolism may be mediated by
transforming growth factor-beta
(
TGF-beta
). Exposure of mesangial cells to glucose or Ang II increases
TGF-beta
expression and secretion. Their effects on matrix metabolism can be blocked by anti-
TGF-beta
antibody or ARBs such as losartan, which also prevents the glucose-induced increment in
TGF-beta
secretion. Taken together, these findings support the hypothesis that the high-glucose milieu of
diabetes
increases Ang II production by renal, and especially, mesangial cells, which results in stimulation of
TGF-beta
secretion, leading to increased synthesis and decreased degradation of matrix proteins, thus producing matrix accumulation. This may be an important mechanism linking hyperglycemia and Ang II in the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy.
...
PMID:Role of angiotensin II in diabetic nephropathy. 1099 97
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