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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Non-insulin dependent (Type 2) diabetes mellitus (
NIDDM
) is a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Oxidative stress mechanisms are often reported to be implied in
type 2 diabetes
mellitus. In order to determine their clinical relevance, we investigated several plasma indicators in the Turkish patients with
NIDDM
: (i) homocysteine (Hcy) and
cysteine
(Cys) which contribute to increase the risk of atherosclerosis during
NIDDM
, (ii) glutathione (GSH) and cysteinylglycine (CysGly) resulting from GSH degradation catalyzed by gamma-glutamylcysteine transferase (GGT), (iii) malonaldehyde (MDA) as a marker for lipid peroxidation, and (iv) total antioxidant status (TAS). Our main results were evaluated based on sex and diabetic status. In female patients, plasma concentrations of MDA and Hcy were significantly higher than in controls, while GSH levels were significantly lower. In males, a difference between control and diabetic groups was noticed only for Hcy, levels being also higher in patients. In the diabetic group, increase in serum glucose concentration was significantly correlated with increased GGT activity. In both controls and diabetic patients, GGT activity was correlated with a raised Cys concentration and a decreased GSH level. In both controls and diabetic patients, there were significant positive correlations between Cys and Hcy and between GSH and Hcy. We concluded that GSH and MDA levels are clinical indicators for an oxidative process linked to
type 2 diabetes
mellitus, especially in women.
...
PMID:Thiols, malonaldehyde and total antioxidant status in the Turkish patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. 1464 36
Resistin, an adipocyte secreted
cysteine
rich hormone has been implicated as molecular link between obesity and
type 2 diabetes
in a murine model. Although, at the protein level mouse and human resistin show remarkable similarities with respect to conserved
cysteine
residues, the physiological role of human resistin is not yet clear. In the present study we describe the purification and refolding of human recombinant resistin using two different refolding processes. Gel filtration analysis of protein refolded by both the methods revealed that human recombinant resistin, like mouse resistin, has a tendency to form dimers. Interestingly, dimerization of resistin appears to be mediated by both covalent (disulfide bond mediated) and non-covalent interactions as seen on reducing and non-reducing SDS-PAGE. Circular dichroism spectral analysis revealed that human resistin peptide backbone is a mixture of alpha-helical and beta-sheet conformation with significant amounts of unordered structure, similar to the mouse resistin. It is likely that the first
cysteine
(Cyst22) of human resistin, which is equivalent to mouse Cyst26, may be involved in stabilizing the dimers through covalent interaction.
...
PMID:Dimerization of human recombinant resistin involves covalent and noncovalent interactions. 1469 40
Ribonuclease inhibitor (RI) is an acidic cytosolic glycoprotein with molecular weight of about 50 kDa, which contains 32
cysteine
residues. It is possibly that RI may have antioxidant effect by thiol-disulfide exchange reaction. We studied the effects of RI over-expression on the rat glial cell line C6 injured with H2O2. The transfected C6 cells with RI cDNA (C6') had higher viability, less LDH leakage and MDA contents, but more GSH contents compare that in the control C6 cells. In transfected C6 cells, the activities of CAT and GST were higher than that in the control C6 cells. Without H202 stress, the activities of CAT and GST in the C6' cells were 1.73 and 3.62 times that in the control C6 cells, respectively; With 1.00 mmol/L H2O2 stress, the activities of CATand GSTin the C6' cells were 3.38 and 2.11 times that in the C6 cells, respectively. These results suggest that the over-expression RI has antioxidant activity and it is able to protect cells from per-oxidative injuries. Moreover, we investigated whether RI has a protective role against mouse hepatic damage in vivo. The mice pretreated with different doses of human RI were injected by CC14. The results show that the SOD activities of therapy groups were significantly higher than that of the control group (p < 0.01), while the contents of
MOD
and activities of ALT and AST in blood were remarkably lower than that of the control group (p < 0.01). Pathological examination shows that the degree of damage was alleviated with RI therapy. These results suggest that RI has the protective role against mouse hepatic damage induced by CC14. The anti-oxidative effects of RI may play an important role in cell protection from per-oxidative injuries.
...
PMID:The antioxidant effects of ribonuclease inhibitor. 1470 97
Lectin-like oxidized LDL receptor-1 (LOX-1) is a newly identified receptor for oxidized LDL that is expressed by vascular cells. LOX-1 is upregulated in aortas of diabetic rats and thus may contribute to the pathogenesis of human diabetic atherosclerosis. In this study, we examined the regulation of human monocyte-derived macrophage (MDM) LOX-1 expression by high glucose and the role of LOX-1 in glucose-induced foam cell formation. Incubation of human MDMs with glucose (5.6 to 30 mmol/L) enhanced, in a dose- and time-dependent manner, LOX-1 gene and protein expression. Induction of LOX-1 gene expression by high glucose was abolished by antioxidants, protein kinase C (PKC), mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB), and activated protein-1 (AP-1) inhibitors. In human MDMs cultured with high glucose, increased expression of PKCbeta2 and enhanced phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase 1/2 was observed. Activation of these kinases was inhibited by the antioxidant N-acetyl-
L-cysteine
(NAC) and by the PKCbeta inhibitor LY379196. High glucose also enhanced the binding of nuclear proteins extracted from human MDMs to the NF-kappaB and AP-1 regulatory elements of the LOX-1 gene promoter. This effect was abrogated by NAC and PKC/MAPK inhibitors. Finally, high glucose induced human macrophage-derived foam cell formation through a LOX-1-dependent pathway. Overall, these results demonstrate that high glucose concentrations enhance LOX-1 expression in human MDMs and that this effect is associated with foam cell formation. Pilot data showing that MDMs of patients with
type 2 diabetes
overexpress LOX-1 support the relevance of this work to human diabetic atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Glucose enhances human macrophage LOX-1 expression: role for LOX-1 in glucose-induced macrophage foam cell formation. 1500 26
Troglitazone (TGZ) was the first glitazone used for the treatment of
type II diabetes mellitus
. TGZ undergoes an oxidative chroman ring-opening reaction to form a quinone product. Recently, cytochrome P450 (P450) was shown to be able to catalyze the formation of TGZ quinone. TGZ quinone was the major metabolite formed by dexamethasone-induced rat liver microsomes or myeloperoxidase (MPO) incubated with TGZ. The ultimate source for the quinone carbonyl oxygen atom of TGZ quinone was investigated using (18)O water in both enzyme reaction systems followed by liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectometry analysis of the TGZ quinone product. The resultant TGZ quinone formed by either liver microsomes or MPO contained a single atom of (18)O. The (18)O atom was determined to be the quinone carbonyl oxygen by collision-induced dissociation fragmentation of the (18)O-labeled TGZ quinone. The formation of TGZ quinone was inhibited approximately 90% by coincubation with ascorbic acid or
cysteine
in the MPO reaction system but only 10 to 20% in liver microsomes, which might reflect the difference in the mechanism by which TGZ quinone is formed by P450 and peroxidase. These results suggest that P450 catalyze an atypical reaction to form TGZ quinone, involving the incorporation of an oxygen from water into the quinone carbonyl position.
...
PMID:Incorporation of an oxygen from water into troglitazone quinone by cytochrome P450 and myeloperoxidase. 1503 98
Glucose toxicity to pancreatic beta-cells is defined as irreversible beta-cell damage, including apoptosis, caused by chronic exposure to high glucose levels in
type 2 diabetes
. Oxidative stress is an important mechanism for glucose toxicity to pancreatic beta-cells. Reducing sugars produce reactive oxygen species through autoxidation and protein glycosylation. 2-Deoxy-d-ribose (dRib) is a reducing sugar with high reactivity. We investigated whether cAMP-stimulating agents could protect beta-cells from dRib-induced oxidative damage. HIT-T15 cells were cultured with various concentrations of dRib for 24 h. We measured cell survival, intracellular cAMP and H2O2 levels, and apoptosis. dRib decreased cell survival in a dose- and time-dependent manner and markedly increased intracellular H2O2 levels and apoptosis. N-Acetyl-l-
cysteine
decreased dRib-induced rises in intracellular H2O2 and apoptosis to control levels. Forskolin, IBMX, and dbcAMP markedly elevated intracellular cAMP levels and significantly attenuated dRib-induced cytotoxicity and apoptosis, but had no influence on the dRib-induced rise in intracellular H2O2 levels. These results demonstrate that dRib produced oxidative stress and apoptosis in pancreatic beta-cells and that elevated intracellular cAMP levels reduced dRib-induced damage, independent of reactive oxygen species metabolism.
...
PMID:Elevated cAMP level attenuates 2-deoxy-d-ribose-induced oxidative damage in pancreatic beta-cells. 1591 Jul 37
Hyperglycemia-induced oxidative stress is detrimental for endothelial cells, contributing to the vascular complications of diabetes. The mitochondrial permeability transition pore (PTP) is an oxidative stress-sensitive channel involved in cell death; therefore, we have examined its potential role in endothelial cells exposed to oxidative stress or high glucose level. Metformin, an antihyperglycemic agent used in
type 2 diabetes
, was also investigated because it inhibits PTP opening in transformed cell lines. Cyclosporin A (CsA), the reference PTP inhibitor, and a therapeutic dose of metformin (100 micromol/l) led to PTP inhibition in permeabilized human microvascular endothelial cells (HMEC-1). Furthermore, exposure of intact HMEC-1 or primary endothelial cells from either human umbilical vein or bovine aorta to the oxidizing agent tert-butylhydroperoxide or to 30 mmol/l glucose triggered PTP opening, cytochrome c decompartmentalization, and cell death. CsA or metformin prevented all of these effects. The antioxidant N-acetyl-l-
cysteine
also prevented hyperglycemia-induced apoptosis. We conclude that 1) elevated glucose concentration leads to an oxidative stress that favors PTP opening and subsequent cell death in several endothelial cell types and 2) metformin prevents this PTP opening-related cell death. We propose that metformin improves diabetes-associated vascular disease both by lowering blood glucose and by its effect on PTP regulation.
...
PMID:Metformin prevents high-glucose-induced endothelial cell death through a mitochondrial permeability transition-dependent process. 1598 20
Protein tyrosine phosphatase activity depends on a catalytic thiolate group on an acidic
cysteine
residue that is sensitive to reactive oxygen species. Representative of this family of enzymes is protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B (PTP1B), a major target for
type 2 diabetes
therapy. PTP1B is sensitive to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in vitro and in cells. It is also sensitive to glutathionylation by glutathione disulfide (GSSG). The sensitivity of PTP1B to the redox state of its environment was partially characterized in vitro by examination of phosphatase activity in the presence of various concentrations of glutathione (GSH) and GSSG. Enzyme sensitivity to glutathionylation was dependent on the amount of available thiol groups and increased as GSH concentration was increased. The half-inhibitory concentration for H2O2 was much less than that of GSSG in the presence of low concentrations of GSH, indicating that reaction with H2O2 is much more likely than is glutathionylation by GSSG. PTP1B and a related oxidant-sensitive phosphatase, PTEN, were also sensitive to the lipid peroxidation by-product 4-hydroxynonenal. Furthermore, PTP1B was inhibited by cytochrome c and microperoxidase. Taken together, these data suggest that not only H2O2, but also a variety of redox-active metabolites and hemes can oxidatively inactivate PTPs with potentially profound implications for signal transduction.
...
PMID:Sensitivity of protein tyrosine phosphatase activity to the redox environment, cytochrome C, and microperoxidase. 1599 63
Resistin is a member of a class of
cysteine
-rich proteins collectively termed resistin-like molecules. Resistin has been implicated in the pathogenesis of obesity-mediated insulin resistance and T2DM (
Type II diabetes mellitus
), at least in rodent models. In addition, resistin also appears to be a pro-inflammatory cytokine. Taken together, resistin, like many other adipocytokines, may possess a dual role in contributing to disease risk. However, to date there has been considerable controversy surrounding this 12.5 kDa polypeptide in understanding its physiological relevance in both human and rodent systems. Furthermore, this has led some to question whether resistin represents an important pathogenic factor in the aetiology of T2DM and cardiovascular disease. Although researchers still remain divided as to the role of resistin, this review will place available data on resistin in the context of our current knowledge of the pathogenesis of obesity-mediated diabetes, and discuss key controversies and developments.
...
PMID:Role of resistin in obesity, insulin resistance and Type II diabetes. 1610 44
Oxidative stress is induced under diabetic conditions through various pathways, including the electron transport chain in mitochondria and the nonenzymatic glycosylation reaction, and is likely involved in progression of pancreatic beta-cell dysfunction developing in diabetes. beta-Cells are vulnerable to oxidative stress, possibly due to low levels of antioxidant enzyme expression. When oxidative stress was induced in vitro in beta cells, the insulin gene promoter activity and mRNA levels were suppressed, accompanied by the reduced activity of pancreatic and duodenal homeobox factor-1 (PDX-1) (also known as IDX-1/STF-1/IPF1), an important transcription factor for the insulin gene. The suppression of oxidative stress by a potent antioxidant, N-acetyl-l-
cysteine
or probucol, led to the recovery of insulin biosynthesis and PDX-1 expression in nuclei and improved glucose tolerance in animal models for
type 2 diabetes
. As a possible cause of this, we recently found that PDX-1 was translocated from the nucleus to the cytoplasm in response to oxidative stress. Furthermore, the addition of a dominant-negative form of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) inhibited the oxidative stress-induced PDX-1 translocation, suggesting an essential role of JNK in mediating the phenomenon. Taken together, the oxidative stress-mediated activation of the JNK pathway leads to nucleocytoplasmic translocation of PDX-1 and thus is likely involved in the progression of beta-cell dysfunction found in diabetes.
...
PMID:Oxidative stress and pancreatic beta-cell dysfunction. 1628 Jun 46
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