Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0011881 (diabetic nephropathy)
10,836 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An enhancement of Na+/H+ exchange (NHE) in blood cells of selected patients with essential hypertension and with diabetic nephropathy has been described by various investigators. Recent studies have shown that enhanced NHE activity persists in immortalized lymphoblasts from these patients after prolonged cell culture and, thus, appears to be under genetic control. Available evidence strongly argues against a mutation in the encoding gene or an overexpression of the NHE. Immortalized cells from hypertensive patients with enhanced NHE activity display two-fold enhanced agonist-induced rises of the cytosolic free Ca2+ concentration and the underlying reason was identified as an increased activation of pertussis toxin (PTX)-sensitive G proteins. The molecular mechanism(s) of this phenomenon have not yet been elucidated. It appears likely that similar changes contribute to the enhanced NHE activity phenotype in diabetic nephropathy, although experimental evidence for this is still lacking. An enhanced activation of PTX-sensitive G proteins could explain many of the hitherto unexplained phenomena in essential hypertension, e.g. inheritance, increased vasoconstriction, hypertrophy of remodeling of arterial blood vessels and the heart, enhanced platelet aggregation etc. In diabetes the same defect could provide the basis for the susceptibility to nephropathy, e.g. by enhancing the deleterious effects of autocrine and paracrine growth factors. Thus, the experimental approach of immortalizing blood cells from patients with essential hypertension and diabetic nephropathy has opened new horizons in the identification of genetically fixed abnormalities in intracellular signal transduction which could contribute to both pathologies and which can now be studied without the confounding influences of the diabetic or hypertensive in vivo milieu.
...
PMID:Na+/H+ exchange in hypertension and in diabetes mellitus--facts and hypotheses. 883 37

Alteration of [Ca2+]i by hyperglycemia is implicated in the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy. However, the effect of high glucose on Ca2+ regulation in proximal tubule cells is not known. Thus, we examined the mechanisms by which high glucose regulates Ca2+ uptake in primary cultured rabbit renal proximal tubule cells. Glucose increased the Ca2+ uptake in a time- and dose-dependent manner. A stimulatory effect of high glucose on Ca2+ uptake is predominantly observed using 25 mM glucose (high glucose) after 1 h, while 25 mM glucose did not affect cell viability and lactate dehydrogenase release. However, 25 mM mannitol and L-glucose did not affect Ca2+ uptake as compared with controls. Nifedipine and methoxyverapamil (L-type Ca2+ channel blockers) blocked high-glucose-induced stimulation of Ca2+ uptake. High-glucose-induced stimulation of Ca2+ uptake was blocked by pertussis toxin, SQ-22536 (adenylate cyclase inhibitor), myristoylated amide 14-22 (protein kinase A inhibitor), neomycin and U-73122 (phospholipase C inhibitors), and staurosporine and bisindolylmaleimide I (protein kinase C inhibitors). In addition, KN-62 (a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II inhibitor) and W-7 (a Ca2+/calmodulin antagonist) blocked high-glucose-induced stimulation of Ca2+ uptake. In conclusion, high glucose stimulates the Ca2+ uptake through L-type Ca2+ channels via G-protein-coupled adenylate cyclase/cAMP and phospholipase C/protein kinase C pathways.
...
PMID:High glucose stimulates Ca2+ uptake via cAMP and PLC/PKC pathways in primary cultured renal proximal tubule cells. 1117 1

Cell loss by apoptosis occurs in renal injury such as diabetic nephropathy. TNF-alpha is a cytokine that induces apoptosis and has been implicated in the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy. The aim was to investigate whether C-peptide or insulin could modulate TNF-alpha-mediated cell death in opossum kidney proximal tubular cells and to examine the mechanism(s) of any effects observed. C-peptide and insulin protect against TNF-alpha-induced proximal tubular cell toxicity and apoptosis. Cell viability was analyzed by methylthiazoletetrazolium assay; cell viability was reduced to 60.8 +/- 2.7% of control after stimulation with 300 ng/ml TNF-alpha. Compromised cell viability was reversed by pretreatment with 5 nM C-peptide or 100 nM insulin. TNF-alpha-induced apoptosis was detected by DNA nick-end labeling and by measuring histone associated DNA fragments using ELISA. By ELISA assay, 300 ng/ml TNF-alpha increased apoptosis by 145.8 +/- 4.9% compared with controls, whereas 5 nM C-peptide and 100 nM insulin reduced apoptosis to 81.6 +/- 4.8 and 77.4 +/- 3.1% of control, respectively. The protective effects of C-peptide and insulin were associated with activation of NF-kappaB. Activation of NF-kappaB by C-peptide was pertussis toxin sensitive and dependent on activation of Galpha(i). Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase but not extracellular signal regulated mitogen-activated protein kinase mediated C-peptide and insulin activation of NF-kappaB. The cytoprotective effects of both C-peptide and insulin were related to increased expression of TNF receptor-associated factor 2, the product of an NF-kappaB-dependent survival gene. These data suggest that C-peptide and/or insulin activation of NF-kappaB-regulated survival genes protects against TNF-alpha-induced renal tubular injury in diabetes. The data further support the concept of C-peptide as a peptide hormone in its own right and suggest a potential therapeutic role for C-peptide.
...
PMID:C-peptide signals via Galpha i to protect against TNF-alpha-mediated apoptosis of opossum kidney proximal tubular cells. 1651 Jul 65

The crucial pathology underlying progressive chronic kidney disease in diabetes is tubulointerstitial fibrosis. Central to this process is epithelial-mesenchymal transformation (EMT) of proximal tubular epithelial cells driven by maladaptive transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) signaling. Novel signaling roles for C-peptide have recently been discovered with evidence emerging that C-peptide may mitigate microvascular complications of diabetes. We studied the potential for C-peptide to interrupt injurious TGF-beta1 signaling pathways and thus block development of EMT in HK2 human kidney proximal tubular cells. Cells were incubated with TGF-beta1 either alone or with C-peptide in low or high glucose. Changes in cell morphology, TGF-beta1 receptor expression, vimentin, E-cadherin, and phosphorylated Smads were assessed. Luciferase reporters were used to assess Smad activity. The cytoskeleton was visualized by TRITC-phalloidin staining. The typical TGF-beta1-stimulated, EMT-associated morphological alterations of proximal tubular cells, including increased vimentin expression, decreased E-cadherin expression, and cytoskeletal rearrangements, were prevented by C-peptide treatment. C-peptide also blocked TGF-beta1-induced upregulation of expression of both type I and type II TGF-beta1 receptors and attenuated TGF-beta1-mediated Smad phosphorylation and Smad transcriptional activity. These effects of C-peptide were inhibited by pertussis toxin. The results demonstrate that C-peptide almost completely reversed the morphological changes in PT cells induced by TGF-beta1 and suggest a role or C-peptide as a renoprotective agent in diabetic nephropathy.
...
PMID:C-peptide reverses TGF-beta1-induced changes in renal proximal tubular cells: implications for treatment of diabetic nephropathy. 1909 88

In recent years, accumulating evidence indicates a biological function for proinsulin C-peptide. These results challenge the traditional view that C-peptide is essentially inert and only useful as a surrogate marker of insulin release. Accordingly, it is now clear that C-peptide binds with high affinity to cell membranes, probably to a pertussis-toxin-sensitive G-protein-coupled receptor. Subsequently, multiple signalling pathways are potently and dose-dependently activated in multiple cell types by C-peptide with the resulting activation of gene transcription and altered cell phenotype. In diabetic animals and Type 1 diabetic patients, short-term studies indicate that C-peptide also enhances glucose disposal and metabolic control. Furthermore, results derived from animal models and clinical studies in Type 1 diabetic patients suggest a salutary effect of C-peptide in the prevention and amelioration of diabetic nephropathy and neuropathy. Therefore a picture of Type 1 diabetes as a dual-hormone-deficiency disease is developing, suggesting that the replacement of C-peptide alongside insulin should be considered in its management.
...
PMID:Cellular and physiological effects of C-peptide. 1924 12