77 results on '"Mara Lorenzi"'
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2. Patrolling Monocytes Are Recruited and Activated by Diabetes to Protect Retinal Microvessels
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Francesco Tecilazich, G. Scotti, Zeina Dagher, Toan A. Phan, Mara Lorenzi, and Fabio Simeoni
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Complications ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Inflammation ,CXCR4 ,Monocytes ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 4, Group A, Member 1 ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Mice, Knockout ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,business.industry ,Microangiopathy ,Retinal Vessels ,Leukostasis ,Retinal ,Diabetic retinopathy ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,chemistry ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
In diabetes there is a long latency between the onset of hyperglycemia and the appearance of structural microangiopathy. Because Ly6Clow patrolling monocytes (PMo) behave as housekeepers of the vasculature, we tested whether PMo protect microvessels against diabetes. We found that in wild-type mice, diabetes reduced PMo in the general circulation but increased by fourfold the absolute number of PMo adherent to retinal vessels (leukostasis). Conversely, in diabetic NR4A1−/− mice, a model of absence of PMo, there was no increase in leukostasis, and at 6 months of diabetes, the number of retinal acellular capillaries almost doubled compared with diabetic wild-type mice. Circulating PMo showed gene expression changes indicative of enhanced migratory, vasculoprotective, and housekeeping activities, as well as profound suppression of genes related to inflammation and apoptosis. Promigratory CXCR4 was no longer upregulated at longer duration when retinal acellular capillaries begin to increase. Thus, after a short diabetes duration, PMo are the cells preferentially recruited to the retinal vessels and protect vessels from diabetic damage. These observations support the need for reinterpretation of the functional meaning of leukostasis in diabetes and document within the natural history of diabetic retinopathy processes of protection and repair that can provide novel paradigms for prevention.
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- 2020
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3. Patrolling monocytes are recruited and activated by diabetes to protect retinal microvessels
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Mara Lorenzi, Zeina Dagher, Giulia Maria Scotti, Fabio Simeoni, Toan A. Phan, Francesco Tecilazich, and Ada Admin
- Abstract
In diabetes there is a long latency between onset of hyperglycemia and appearance of structural microangiopathy. Because Ly6Clow patrolling monocytes (PMo) behave as housekeepers of the vasculature, we tested whether PMo protect microvessels against diabetes. We found that, in wild-type mice, diabetes reduced PMo in the general circulation but increased by 4-fold the absolute number of PMo adherent to retinal vessels (leukostasis). Conversely, in diabetic NR4A1-/- mice ─ a model of absence of PMo ─ there was no increase in leukostasis at all; and at 6 months of diabetes the number of retinal acellular capillaries almost doubled when compared to diabetic wild-type mice. Circulating PMo showed gene expression changes indicative of enhanced migratory, vasculo-protective, and housekeeping activities; as well as profound suppression of genes related to inflammation and apoptosis. Pro-migratory CXCR4 was no longer upregulated at longer duration, when retinal acellular capillaries begin to increase. Thus, after short diabetes duration, PMo are the cells preferentially recruited to the retinal vessels and protect vessels from diabetic damage. These observations support the need for reinterpretation of the functional meaning of leukostasis in diabetes, and document within the natural history of diabetic retinopathy processes of protection-repair that can provide novel paradigms for prevention.
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- 2020
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4. Patrolling monocytes are activated in diabetes and provide protection to retinal vessels in the context of leukostasis
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Mara Lorenzi, Zeina Dagher-Mansour, Toan A. Phan, Francesco Tecilazich, and Fabio Simeoni
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chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,business.industry ,Diabetes mellitus ,Patrolling ,medicine ,Context (language use) ,Leukostasis ,Retinal ,medicine.disease ,business ,Neuroscience - Published
- 2018
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5. Endothelial Progenitor Cells Carrying Monocyte Markers Are Selectively Abnormal in Type 1 Diabetic Patients With Early Retinopathy
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Chiara Gerhardinger, Mara Lorenzi, Antonio Secchi, Riccardo Bonfanti, M. R. Pastore, Gianpaolo Zerbini, Rosangela Lattanzio, Silvia Maestroni, Anna Maestroni, Alessio Palini, Gemma Tremolada, Gianpaolo, Zerbini, Anna, Maestroni, Alessio, Palini, Gemma, Tremolada, Rosangela, Lattanzio, Silvia, Maestroni, Matteo Rocco Pastore, Secchi, Antonio, Bonfanti, Riccardo, Chiara, Gerhardinger, and Mara, Lorenzi
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Adult ,Male ,Complications ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Monocytes ,Neovascularization ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Progenitor cell ,Cells, Cultured ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,business.industry ,Stem Cells ,Monocyte ,Endothelial Cells ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Case-Control Studies ,Immunology ,Female ,Stem cell ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Biomarkers ,Retinopathy ,Homing (hematopoietic) - Abstract
Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) enter the systemic circulation in response to cues related to vascular damage and need for neovascularization. Thus, EPCs could become readily accessible informers of vascular status and enable the survey of vascular pathologies during preclinical stages. To identify EPC changes with biomarker potential, we investigated whether discrete EPC abnormalities were associated with early nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy (NPDR). Two EPC subtypes with different functions have been characterized to date—one solely committed to the endothelial lineage and the other carrying both endothelial and monocytic markers. We found that only the latter, colony-forming units (CFU)-Hill cells, manifested abnormalities in type 1 diabetic patients with NPDR compared with control subjects. The abnormalities consisted in an increased number of colonies formed in vitro and downregulation of the molecules that facilitate homing at sites of vascular injury. The abnormalities were absent in type 1 diabetic patients free of retinopathy and other complications, despite long diabetes duration, but were detected in some of the patients without clinical retinopathy after short diabetes duration. CFU-Hill cells are potential informers of diabetic microangiopathy but may be preempted from carrying out reparative functions if the molecular abnormalities compromise interactions with the damaged vascular wall.
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- 2012
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6. The Increased Transforming Growth Factor-β Signaling Induced by Diabetes Protects Retinal Vessels
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Mara Lorenzi, Joseph Vaz, Chiara Gerhardinger, Zeina Dagher, Francesco Tecilazich, Michael Goodridge, Dagher, Zeina, Gerhardinger, Chiara, Vaz, Joseph, Goodridge, Michael, Tecilazich, Francesco, and Lorenzi, Mara
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0301 basic medicine ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Activin Receptors ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 14 ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Transforming Growth Factor beta ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,n.d ,Animals ,Receptor ,Chemokine CCL2 ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Kinase ,Microangiopathy ,Body Weight ,Endothelial Cells ,Reproducibility of Results ,Retinal Vessels ,Regular Article ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Endoglin ,medicine.disease ,Capillaries ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Azabicyclo Compounds ,Retinopathy ,Transforming growth factor ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
The roles of transforming growth factor (TGF)-β in extracellular matrix production and vascular remodeling, coupled with increased TGF-β expression and signaling in diabetes, suggest TGF-β as an important contributor to the microangiopathy of diabetic retinopathy and nephropathy. To investigate whether increased TGF-β signaling could be a therapeutic target for preventing retinopathy, we used a pharmacologic approach (SM16, a selective inhibitor of the type 1 TGF-β receptor activin receptor–like kinase 5, orally active) to inhibit the increased, but not the basal, Tgf-β signaling in retinal vessels of diabetic rats. At the level of vascular gene expression, 3.5 months' diabetes induced minimal changes. Diabetes + SM16 for 3 weeks caused widespread changes in gene expression poised to enhance vascular inflammation, thrombosis, leakage, and wall instability; these changes were not observed in control rats given SM16. The synergy of diabetes and SM16 in altering gene expression was not observed in the lung. At the level of vascular network morphology, 7 months' diabetes induced no detectable changes. Diabetes + SM16 for 3 weeks caused instead distorted morphology and decreased density. Thus, in diabetes, retinal vessels become dependent on a small increase in TGF-β signaling via activin receptor–like kinase 5 to maintain early integrity. The increased TGF-β signaling may protect against rapid retinopathy progression and should not be a target of inhibitory interventions.
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- 2017
7. Defective Myogenic Response of Retinal Vessels Is Associated With Accelerated Onset of Retinopathy in Type 1 Diabetic Individuals
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Sara Mazzantini, Lucia Sobrin, Mara Lorenzi, Gilbert T. Feke, Francesco Tecilazich, Tecilazich, Francesco, Feke, Gilbert T., Mazzantini, Sara, Sobrin, Lucia, and Lorenzi, Mara
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Male ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Muscle, Smooth, Vascular ,Laser doppler ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Laser-Doppler Flowmetry ,Retinal blood flow ,Prospective Studies ,Myogenic response ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Middle Aged ,Sensory Systems ,Perfusion ,Type 1 diabetes ,Cardiology ,Female ,Blood Flow Velocity ,Retinopathy ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Type 1 diabete ,Retinal Artery ,Myogenic contraction ,Retinal circulation ,Accelerator ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Young Adult ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,business.industry ,Retinal ,Biomarker ,medicine.disease ,Ophthalmology ,Endocrinology ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,chemistry ,Regional Blood Flow ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,business ,Sensory System - Abstract
PURPOSE: We seek to identify pathogenic mechanisms for diabetic retinopathy that can become therapeutic targets beyond hyperglycemia and hypertension. We investigated if a defective myogenic response of retinal arteries to increased perfusion pressure, which exposes capillaries to increased pressure and flow, is associated with the onset of clinical retinopathy. METHODS: We examined prospectively the incidence of retinopathy in type 1 diabetic individuals tested 4 years earlier for the retinal arterial myogenic response, and in a cross-sectional study the prevalence of defective myogenic response in type 1 patients who had diabetic retinopathy. Among these, we contrasted early-onset (after 15 ± 2 years of diabetes, E-DR; n = 5) to late-onset (after 26 ± 3 years of diabetes, L-DR; n = 7) retinopathy. We measured the myogenic response using a laser Doppler blood flowmeter after a change in posture from sitting to reclining, which increases retinal perfusion pressure. RESULTS: Five of seven participants who 4 years prior had a defective myogenic response had now developed clinical retinopathy; as compared with only one of six participants who 4 years prior had a normal response (P = 0.10). In the cross-sectional study, all participants had normal retinal hemodynamics at steady state. In response to the postural change, only the E-DR group showed defective myogenic response (P = 0.005 versus controls, P = 0.02 versus L-DR) and abnormally high retinal blood flow (P = 0.016 versus controls). CONCLUSIONS: In type 1 diabetic patients, a defective myogenic response of retinal arteries to pressure is not required for the development of clinical retinopathy, but is prominently associated with an accelerated onset of retinopathy.
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- 2016
8. MACULAR MICROPSEUDOCYSTS IN EARLY STAGES OF DIABETIC RETINOPATHY
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Giliola Calori, Marco Gagliardi, Luisa Pierro, Rosangela Lattanzio, Gisella Maestranzi, Gemma Tremolada, Umberto De Benedetto, Mara Lorenzi, and Sergio Margari
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,genetic structures ,Type 2 diabetes ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Retinal Diseases ,Optical coherence tomography ,Ophthalmology ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Type 1 diabetes ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Cysts ,business.industry ,Retinal ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,eye diseases ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,chemistry ,Female ,sense organs ,business ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Retinopathy - Abstract
Purpose To identify by noninvasive means early retinal abnormalities that may predict diabetic macular edema. Methods The authors analyzed retrospectively data from consecutive patients with Type 1 (n = 16) or Type 2 (n = 23) diabetes who presented for routine follow-up of early retinopathy, had no clinical signs or symptoms of diabetic macular edema, and were evaluated with spectral-domain optical coherence tomography. Age- and gender-matched nondiabetic subjects provided normative data. Results Spectral-domain optical coherence tomography revealed in the macular region of diabetic patients small hyporeflective areas (median diameter, 55 μm) contained within discrete retinal layers that we named micropseudocysts (MPCs). Micropseudocysts are associated with vascular leakage. The patients showing MPCs had more frequently systemic hypertension and increased central foveal thickness than those without MPCs. The association with increased central foveal thickness was only in the patients with Type 2 diabetes. Conclusion Macular MPCs in patients with mild diabetic retinopathy appear to reflect leakage and can precede macular thickening. The association of MPCs with increased central foveal thickness in patients with Type 2 diabetes, but not in patients with Type 1 diabetes, points to a greater tendency to retinal fluid accumulation in patients with Type 2 diabetes. Studies in larger cohorts will determine the usefulness of MPCs in strategies to abort diabetic macular edema.
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- 2011
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9. The Transforming Growth Factor-β Pathway Is a Common Target of Drugs That Prevent Experimental Diabetic Retinopathy
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Zeina Dagher, Chiara Gerhardinger, Mara Lorenzi, Yong Seek Park, and Paola Sebastiani
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Complications ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Biology ,Imidazolidines ,Retina ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Polyol pathway ,Transforming Growth Factor beta ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,030304 developmental biology ,Inflammation ,0303 health sciences ,Aldose reductase ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,Aspirin ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Retinal Vessels ,Retinal ,Transforming growth factor beta ,Diabetic retinopathy ,medicine.disease ,Aldose reductase inhibitor ,Rats ,3. Good health ,Oxidative Stress ,Endocrinology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,chemistry ,030221 ophthalmology & optometry ,biology.protein ,RNA ,Original Article ,Sorbinil ,Receptors, Transforming Growth Factor beta ,Retinopathy ,medicine.drug - Abstract
OBJECTIVE Prevention of diabetic retinopathy would benefit from availability of drugs that preempt the effects of hyperglycemia on retinal vessels. We aimed to identify candidate drug targets by investigating the molecular effects of drugs that prevent retinal capillary demise in the diabetic rat. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We examined the gene expression profile of retinal vessels isolated from rats with 6 months of streptozotocin-induced diabetes and compared it with that of control rats. We then tested whether the aldose reductase inhibitor sorbinil and aspirin, which have different mechanisms of action, prevented common molecular abnormalities induced by diabetes. The Affymetrix GeneChip Rat Genome 230 2.0 array was complemented by real-time RT-PCR, immunoblotting, and immunohistochemistry. RESULTS The retinal vessels of diabetic rats showed differential expression of 20 genes of the transforming growth factor (TGF)-β pathway, in addition to genes involved in oxidative stress, inflammation, vascular remodeling, and apoptosis. The complete loop of TGF-β signaling, including Smad2 phosphorylation, was enhanced in the retinal vessels, but not in the neural retina. Sorbinil normalized the expression of 71% of the genes related to oxidative stress and 62% of those related to inflammation. Aspirin had minimal or no effect on these two categories. The two drugs were instead concordant in reducing the upregulation of genes of the TGF-β pathway (55% for sorbinil and 40% for aspirin) and apoptosis (74 and 42%, respectively). CONCLUSIONS Oxidative and inflammatory stress is the distinct signature that the polyol pathway leaves on retinal vessels. TGF-β and apoptosis are, however, the ultimate targets to prevent the capillary demise in diabetic retinopathy.
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- 2009
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10. Retinal haemodynamics in individuals with well-controlled type 1 diabetes
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J. W. McMeel, Enrico Cagliero, L. Pitler, David M. Nathan, Mara Lorenzi, Gilbert T. Feke, Fatmire Berisha, and Debra A. Schaumberg
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Short Communication ,Retinal circulation ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Retina ,Young Adult ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Laser-Doppler Flowmetry ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Retinal blood flow ,Type 1 diabetes ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,business.industry ,Surrogate endpoint ,Microangiopathy ,Confounding ,Hemodynamics ,Retinal Vessels ,Retinal ,Diabetic retinopathy ,medicine.disease ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Cardiology ,Female ,business ,Retinopathy - Abstract
Aims/hypothesis Abnormalities in retinal haemodynamics have been reported in patients with type 1 diabetes in advance of clinical retinopathy. These abnormalities could therefore be useful as early markers or surrogate endpoints for studying the microangiopathy. Since the DCCT, the increased focus on good glycaemic control is changing the natural history of diabetic retinopathy. Based on this, the aim of this study was to investigate whether patients with type 1 diabetes treated entirely or mostly in the post-DCCT era and tested in the absence of confounding factors show retinal haemodynamic abnormalities. Methods We measured retinal haemodynamics by laser Doppler flowmetry in 33 type 1 diabetic individuals with no or minimal retinopathy (age 30 ± 7 years, duration of diabetes 8.8 ± 4.6 years, 9% showing microaneurysms), and 31 age- and sex-matched non-diabetic controls. The study participants were not taking vasoactive medications, and blood glucose at the time of haemodynamic measurements was required to be between 3.8 and 11.1 mmol/l. Results HbA1c was 7.5 ± 1.2% and blood glucose 7.7 ± 2.8 mmol/l in these type 1 diabetic individuals, indicating relatively good glycaemic control. Retinal blood speed, arterial diameter and blood flow were not different between the diabetic individuals and the matched controls. Conclusions/interpretation Type 1 diabetic patients with no or minimal retinopathy who maintain relatively good glycaemic control do not show abnormalities of the retinal circulation at steady state, even after several years of diabetes. In such patients it may be necessary to test the vascular response to challenges to uncover any subtle abnormalities of the retinal vessels.
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- 2007
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11. The Diabetic Milieu and Endothelial Cell Replication
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Sayon Roy, Enrico Cagliero, Timothy Roth, and Mara Lorenzi
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Endothelial stem cell ,Replication (statistics) ,Biology ,Cell biology - Published
- 2015
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12. Mechanisms and strategies for prevention in diabetic retinopathy
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Mara Lorenzi
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Clinical Trials as Topic ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Drug Evaluation, Preclinical ,Antidiabetic treatment ,Diabetic retinopathy ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Clinical trial ,Intervention (counseling) ,Diabetes mellitus ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Intensive care medicine ,business ,Retinopathy - Abstract
Evidence converges from multiple directions to indicate that prevention or very early intervention is the correct approach to diabetic retinopathy. Preclinical studies are identifying promising drugs or classes of drugs to be added to antidiabetic treatment. Recent clinical trials were still initiated at such late stages of retinopathy that the results are not readily interpretable. The challenge for the next few years is to find ways faster than clinical trials to ascertain the relevance to human diabetic retinopathy of adjunct drugs successful in animal studies.
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- 2006
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13. Early Complement Activation and Decreased Levels of Glycosylphosphatidylinositol-Anchored Complement Inhibitors in Human and Experimental Diabetic Retinopathy
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Chiara Gerhardinger, Jing Zhang, and Mara Lorenzi
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Endothelium ,Glycosylphosphatidylinositols ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Complement Membrane Attack Complex ,CD59 ,Biology ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Classical complement pathway ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Tissue Distribution ,Complement Pathway, Classical ,Complement Activation ,Aged ,Complement Inactivator Proteins ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,CD46 ,Microangiopathy ,Retinal Vessels ,Retinal ,Complement C3 ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Complement system ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Alternative complement pathway ,Female - Abstract
Diabetic retinal microangiopathy is characterized by increased permeability, leukostasis, microthrombosis, and apoptosis of capillary cells, all of which could be caused or compounded by activation of complement. In this study, we observed deposition of C5b-9, the terminal product of complement activation, in the wall of retinal vessels of human eye donors with 9 ± 3 years of type 2 diabetes, but not in the vessels of age-matched nondiabetic donors. C5b-9 often colocalized with von Willebrand factor in luminal endothelium. C1q and C4, the complement components unique to the classical pathway, were not detected in the diabetic retinas, suggesting that C5b-9 was generated via the alternative pathway, the spontaneous activation of which is regulated by complement inhibitors. The diabetic donors showed a prominent reduction in the retinal levels of CD55 and CD59, the two complement inhibitors linked to the plasma membrane by glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchors, but not in the levels of transmembrane CD46. Similar complement activation in retinal vessels and selective reduction in the levels of retinal CD55 and CD59 were observed in rats with a 10-week duration of streptozotocin-induced diabetes. Thus, diabetes causes defective regulation of complement inhibitors and complement activation that precede most other manifestations of diabetic retinal microangiopathy. These are novel clues for probing how diabetes affects and damages vascular cells.
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- 2002
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14. Activation of Nuclear Factor-κB Induced by Diabetes and High Glucose Regulates a Proapoptotic Program in Retinal Pericytes
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Veronica Asnaghi, Timothy S. Kern, Giulio R. Romeo, Wei Hua Liu, and Mara Lorenzi
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endothelium ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,Retina ,Cyclophilins ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Bcl-2-associated X protein ,Reference Values ,Cause of Death ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,bcl-2-Associated X Protein ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Microcirculation ,NF-kappa B ,Retinal Vessels ,Retinal ,Transfection ,Middle Aged ,Capillaries ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 ,chemistry ,Hyperglycemia ,biology.protein ,Female ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,Endothelium, Vascular ,Pericyte ,Pericytes - Abstract
To reconstruct the events that may contribute to the accelerated death of retinal vascular cells in diabetes, we investigated in situ and in vitro the activation of nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB), which is triggered by cellular stress and controls several programs of gene expression. The retinal capillaries of diabetic eye donors showed an increased number of pericyte nuclei positive for NF-kappaB, when compared with nondiabetic donors, whereas endothelial cells were negative. Microvascular cell apoptosis and acellular capillaries were increased only in the diabetic donors with numerous NF-kappaB-positive pericytes. Likewise, high glucose in vitro activated NF-kappaB in retinal pericytes but not in endothelial cells, and increased apoptosis only in pericytes. Studies with NF-kappaB inhibitors suggested that in pericytes, basal NF-kappaB has prosurvival functions, whereas NF-kappaB activation induced by high glucose is proapoptotic. Pericytes exposed to high glucose showed increased expression of Bax and of tumor necrosis factor-alpha, which were prevented by the NF-kappaB inhibitors and mimicked by transfection with the p65 subunit of NF-kappaB, and failed to increase the levels of the NF-kappaB-dependent inhibitors of apoptosis. Colocalization of activated NF-kappaB and Bax overexpression was observed in the retinal pericytes of diabetic donors. A proapoptotic program triggered by NF-kappaB selectively in retinal pericytes in response to hyperglycemia is a possible mechanism for the early demise of pericytes in diabetic retinopathy.
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- 2002
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15. Endothelial progenitor cells and response to ranibizumab in age-related macular degeneration
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Fabrizio Scotti, Alessio Palini, Ugo Introini, Mara Lorenzi, M. Setaccioli, Anna Maestroni, and Gianpaolo Zerbini
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Male ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A ,Stromal cell ,genetic structures ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Lipopolysaccharide Receptors ,Angiogenesis Inhibitors ,Antigens, CD34 ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Antibodies, Monoclonal, Humanized ,Macular Degeneration ,Age related ,Ranibizumab ,medicine ,Humans ,Progenitor cell ,Aged ,Endothelial Progenitor Cells ,business.industry ,Growth factor ,General Medicine ,Plasma levels ,Macular degeneration ,medicine.disease ,Flow Cytometry ,Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-2 ,eye diseases ,Chemokine CXCL12 ,Choroidal Neovascularization ,Ophthalmology ,Choroidal neovascularization ,Intravitreal Injections ,cardiovascular system ,Cancer research ,Cytokines ,Leukocyte Common Antigens ,Female ,sense organs ,medicine.symptom ,business ,circulatory and respiratory physiology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Choroidal neovascularization (CNV) is the main cause of vision loss in age-related macular degeneration (AMD). In experimental CNV, endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) contribute to the formation of new vessels. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the behavior of EPCs in patients with AMD supports a role for EPCs in human CNV. Methods: The number of circulating EPCs that are considered pure endothelial precursors and EPCs with monocytic characteristics, and the plasma levels of regulatory cytokines were evaluated in 23 patients with AMD with active CNV and 20 matched controls. In the patients, this profile was re-evaluated after ranibizumab. Results: When compared with controls, the patients with AMD showed a lower number of both EPC types (P = 0.03) and higher plasma levels (P = 0.03) of stromal cell–derived factor 1. Three monthly injections of ranibizumab returned to control levels the number of circulating EPCs considered pure endothelial precursors and of stromal cell–derived factor 1, but not of monocytic EPCs. Conclusion: The observations indicate responsiveness of circulating EPCs to the CNV process in AMD. They suggest the hypothesis that increased stromal cell–derived factor 1 production at the CNV site (reflected in higher plasma levels) recruits EPCs from the circulation, and that antivascular endothelial growth factor therapy selectively decreases the recruitment of cells to be incorporated into new vessels.
- Published
- 2014
16. Early cellular and molecular changes induced by diabetes in the retina
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Chiara Gerhardinger and Mara Lorenzi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cell type ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Diabetic angiopathy ,Retina ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,business.industry ,Microangiopathy ,Diabetic retinopathy ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Experimental pathology ,sense organs ,business ,Neuroscience ,Diabetic Angiopathies ,Retinopathy - Abstract
For several decades the pathobiology of diabetic retinopathy has been the object of conjecture and hypotheses. Indeed, very little was known about the cellular events triggered by diabetes in the retina and about the processes underlying the microangiopathy. In the last few years there has been a concerted effort to acquire such information, and the work has targeted not just the retinal vessels but more comprehensively the retina. The picture emerging is one of multiplicity: multiple cell types in the retina are affected early by diabetes and multiple processes are operative in the microangiopathy. The main abnormalities captured to date are altered expression of several genes, apoptosis, microthrombosis, and proinflammatory changes. The new information needs to be integrated into temporal and mechanistic sequences and further expanded but it is beginning to provide a framework for the cellular dimension of diabetic retinopathy.
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- 2001
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17. Increased Prevalence of Microthromboses in Retinal Capillaries of Diabetic Individuals
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Michele Maiello, Boeri D, and Mara Lorenzi
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Time Factors ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Platelet Membrane Glycoproteins ,Fibrin ,Neovascularization ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Antigens, CD ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Cadaver ,Prevalence ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,Retina ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,Factor VIII ,biology ,business.industry ,Integrin beta3 ,Retinal Vessels ,Thrombosis ,Retinal ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Factor XIII ,Capillaries ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,medicine.drug ,Retinopathy - Abstract
In diabetic retinopathy, capillary nonperfusion and eventual obliteration can lead to retinal ischemia and sight-threatening neovascularization. The occurrence of retinal microthrombosis in human diabetes has long been suspected and occasionally observed but never systematically demonstrated. We used trypsin digestion to isolate the intact vascular network from retinas obtained postmortem from nine diabetic donors (age 64 ± 11 years, duration of diabetes 6 ± 4 years; mean ± SD) and eight age-matched nondiabetic donors. Topographically matched sectors (each one-sixth of retina) of diabetic and nondiabetic retinas were tested sequentially with antibodies to fibrin cross-linking factor XIII and platelet glycoprotein (GP)-IIIa to identify fibrin-platelet thrombi. In some trypsin digests, we also examined vascular cell apoptosis. The retina from a nondiabetic donor, 24 years of age, who had died of trauma, was used to exclude confounding influences caused by the postmortem period. When compared with those of nondiabetic donors, the retinas of diabetic donors showed double the number of capillary segments with colocalized immunostaining for factor XIII and GPIIIa (P = 0.02). The total area of the positive segments was fourfold greater in the diabetic than in the nondiabetic donors (P = 0.02) and correlated with the duration of diabetes (r = 0.71, P < 0.05). Large thrombi were six times more frequent in the diabetic donors (P = 0.03), and there was a significant topographical association of microthrombosis with apoptotic cells in both diabetic and nondiabetic vessels (P = 0.0001). Hence, diabetes of short duration was found to be associated with a greater than normal number and size of platelet-fibrin thrombi in the retinal capillaries. These thrombi can contribute to capillary obliteration and retinal ischemia and may be a practical target for early drug intervention.
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- 2001
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18. Müller cell changes in human diabetic retinopathy
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Chiara Gerhardinger, Masakazu Mizutani, and Mara Lorenzi
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Immunoblotting ,bcl-X Protein ,Biology ,Retina ,Cohort Studies ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Glutamate-Ammonia Ligase ,Internal medicine ,Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Aged ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,Glial fibrillary acidic protein ,Immune Sera ,Microangiopathy ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Retinal ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Tissue Donors ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Neuroglia ,Cattle ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Female ,Rabbits ,sense organs ,Chickens ,Immunostaining ,Retinopathy - Abstract
Vascular cells may not be the only cells affected by diabetes in the retina. In particular, abnormalities of the b-wave of the electroretinogram in diabetic patients with absent or minimal microangiopathy have pointed to possible dysfunction of Müller cells, the principal glia of the retina. In this study, we sought evidence for diabetes-induced Müller cell abnormalities by testing the expression of three proteins (Bcl-2, glutamine synthetase [GS], and glial fibrillar acidic protein [GFAP]) that are solely or predominantly expressed in Müller cells and show a reproducible pattern of changes in the context of retinal injuries or degenerations. Retinas obtained postmortem from a total of 14 donors aged 65 +/- 6 years with 10 +/- 4 years of diabetes and histological evidence of microangiopathy and 18 age-matched nondiabetic donors were examined by immunohistochemistry and immunoblotting. The typical Müller cell pattern of Bcl-2 and GS immunostaining was similar for both intensity and distribution in the nondiabetic and diabetic retinas, as were the levels of the two proteins. In contrast, GFAP staining, largely confined to the most proximal retina in the nondiabetic donors, was in most diabetic retinas present along the entire length of the Müller cell processes, throughout the outer retina. Accordingly, the level of GFAP was increased in the diabetic retinas (161 +/- 106 densitometric units/microg protein vs. 55 +/- 45 in the nondiabetic retinas, P = 0.03). These data provide evidence for selective biosynthetic changes of Müller glial cells in diabetes. Because Müller cells produce factors capable of modulating blood flow, vascular permeability, and cell survival, and their processes surround all blood vessels in the retina, a possible role of these cells in the pathogenesis of retinal microangiopathy deserves to be investigated.
- Published
- 1998
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19. Mesangial cell abnormalities in spontaneously hypertensive rats before the onset of hypertension
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Mara Lorenzi, Driss Zoukhri, and José B. Lopes de Faria
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medicine.medical_specialty ,hypertension ,Hypertension, Renal ,Renal glomerulus ,mesangial cell ,Blotting, Western ,Gene Expression ,Rats, Inbred WKY ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Rats, Inbred SHR ,medicine ,Animals ,Northern blot ,RNA, Messenger ,Aorta ,Cells, Cultured ,Kidney ,diabetes ,biology ,Mesangial cell ,Cell growth ,Age Factors ,genetics and hypertension ,medicine.disease ,Actins ,Fibronectins ,Glomerular Mesangium ,Rats ,Fibronectin ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blood pressure ,Nephrology ,biology.protein ,Collagen ,Cell Division - Abstract
Mesangial cell abnormalities in spontaneously hypertensive rats before the onset of hypertension. To identify kidney biosynthetic abnormalities that may precede the onset of hypertension, we studied the expression of flbronectin (FN) and collagen IV (Coll IV) in young SHR (4 weeks of age) whose systolic blood pressure was normal and similar to that of age-matched control WKY rats. In isolated glomeruli the level of FN protein assessed by immunoblotting tended to be lower in the SHR than in the WKY rats. By Northern analysis the FN/actin mRNA ratio was significantly lower in glomeruli from SHR (0.56 ± 0.47) than in glomeruli from WKY rats (2.0 ± 0.8). These abnormalities were maintained in vitro since the expression of FN was significantly lower in SHR than in WKY cultured mesangial cells (FN/actin mRNA ratio=0.84 ± 0.46 vs. 1.9 ± 0.7, P = 0.029). No differences in Coll IV mRNA or protein levels were observed in SHR glomeruli and mesangial cells when compared with WKY rats. The levels of aortic FN and Coll IV mRNAs were not different in SHR and WKY rats. In addition, mesangial cells from SHR showed a significantly higher growth rate than those from WKY. The biosynthetic and proliferative abnormalities observed in the SHR mesangial cells appear to reflect genetic characteristics, and could provide novel insights into cellular mechanisms linking the genetics of hypertension with predisposition to glomerular pathology.
- Published
- 1997
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20. Early biosynthetic changes in the diabetic-like retinopathy of galactose-fed rats
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Sayon Roy and Mara Lorenzi
- Subjects
Galactosemias ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Gene Expression ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Retina ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Pathogenesis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Gene expression ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,DNA Primers ,Basement membrane ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,biology ,Galactosemia ,Galactose ,Retinal ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Reference Standards ,medicine.disease ,Animal Feed ,Actins ,Fibronectins ,Rats ,Fibronectin ,Disease Models, Animal ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Collagen ,Densitometry - Abstract
The histological lesions of diabetic micro-angiopathy have a long latency, but vascular cell function may be affected at early stages of the process. Rats with experimental galactosaemia develop a diabetic-like retinopathy in the absence of other metabolic abnormalities characteristic of diabetes mellitus; basement membrane thickening is measurable in their retinal vessels after 7 months of galactose feeding. To examine the course of biosynthetic changes relevant to the process, retinal expression of collagen IV and fibronectin were compared in rats fed a 30% galactose diet or a control diet for 5 or 9 weeks. Total retinal RNA was studied by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction; the fibronectin primers encompassed the alternatively spliced EIIIA exon. The levels of alpha 1 (IV) collagen and fibronectin mRNAs were measured relative to an internal standard (beta-actin mRNA). The proportion of EIIIA+ to EIIIA- fibronectin transcripts was similar in the retinas of control and galactose-fed rats, which, however, showed increased levels of both fibronectin and collagen IV mRNAs in the presence of unchanged beta-actin mRNA levels. An upward trend was detected by 5 weeks of galactose feeding; and after 9 weeks the fibronectin/actin ratio was 1.2 +/- 0.3 vs 0.8 +/- 0.2 in controls (p = 0.015) and the collagen IV/actin ratio was 1.3 +/- 0.3 vs 0.9 +/- 0.2 in controls (p = 0.04). Thus, hyperhexosaemia of a few weeks' duration is a perturbation sufficient to increase the synthesis of basement membrane components in the retina. The search for additional early biosynthetic changes should assist in reconstructing the pathogenesis of hexose-induced retinal microangiopathy.
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- 1996
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21. Increased prevalence of proliferative retinopathy in patients with type 1 diabetes who are deficient in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
- Author
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G. Cappai, Mara Lorenzi, M. Songini, Alessandro Doria, and Jerry D. Cavallerano
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Pentose phosphate pathway ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Biology ,Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase ,medicine.disease_cause ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Young Adult ,Polyol pathway ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase ,Humans ,Endothelial dysfunction ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Type 1 diabetes ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Endocrinology ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency ,chemistry ,Italy ,Oxidative stress - Abstract
Impaired activity of the pentose phosphate pathway of glucose metabolism caused by hereditary deficiency of its key regulatory enzyme glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) has consequences that may worsen or attenuate the course of diabetic complications. Decreased availability of NADPH can predispose to oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction, but can also limit the activity of the polyol pathway and cholesterol synthesis. Reduced availability of pentose phosphates for nucleic acid synthesis could impair cell proliferation. We sought to learn in which direction G6PD deficiency affects diabetic retinopathy.We enrolled patients who were G6PD-deficient or -sufficient with type 1 diabetes of duration 15 years or longer for whom HbA(1c) records were available for at least the previous 3 years. Renal failure and smoking were exclusion criteria. For each participant seven standard field colour photographs were obtained of each eye, and retinopathy was graded in a masked fashion.The clinical characteristics of the 19 G6PD-deficient patients studied (age 42 ± 9 years, diabetes duration 24 ± 6 years, average HbA(1c) over 3 years 6.7 ± 0.8%) were similar to those of the 35 G6PD-sufficient patients. Almost 90% of patients in both groups had retinopathy; however, proliferative retinopathy was noted solely among G6PD-deficient patients (28%, p = 0.0036 vs G6PD-sufficient). The G6PD-deficient patients also showed a trend for increased frequency of microalbuminuria.The data suggest that G6PD deficiency accelerates the microvascular complications of diabetes, and that among the consequences of G6PD deficiency those that can enhance the damage caused by diabetes outweigh those that could be protective.
- Published
- 2010
22. Glucose toxicity in the vascular complications of diabetes: The cellular perspective
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Mara Lorenzi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Perspective (graphical) ,Glucose toxicity ,medicine.disease ,Bioinformatics ,Biochemistry ,Pathogenesis ,Glucose ,Endocrinology ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Toxicity ,medicine ,Blood Vessels ,Humans ,business ,Complication ,Diabetic Angiopathies - Published
- 1992
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23. Pathobiology of endothelial and other vascular cells in diabetes mellitus. Call for data
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Enrico Cagliero and Mara Lorenzi
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cell type ,Endothelium ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Diabetic angiopathy ,Bioinformatics ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Pathogenesis ,Diabetes mellitus ,Diabetes Mellitus ,medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Pathological ,Hemostasis ,business.industry ,Microangiopathy ,Hemodynamics ,medicine.disease ,Capillaries ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Experimental pathology ,Endothelium, Vascular ,business ,Diabetic Angiopathies - Abstract
Because the pathogenetic understanding of diabetic vascular complications remains fragmentary, and even the best available interventions may prove insufficient to arrest the progression of certain lesions, new avenuses of investigation should be pursued. One of these should be the early in vivo investigation of the cells that endure the pathological process (pericytes and endothelial and mesangial cells), preferably in humans. The abnormal vascular architecture (i.e., capillary acellularity, microaneurysms, thickened basement membranes, and mesangial expansion) and the hemostatic and hemodynamic alterations observed in diabetes point to an adaptive/maladaptive replicative and biosynthetic program triggered by the metabolic perturbation, but positive documentation of cellular changes in vivo remains grossly insufficient. Critical review of current knowledge of microangiopathy permits elaboration of specific questions that, with the tools provided by the new molecular technology, may be posed about vascular cells in situ. Knowing whether and how the cell types involved in the vascular complications of diabetes modify their differentiated functions may offer novel targets for intervention and, most important, should provide a much needed “sounding board” against which to test the viability and refine the focus of pathogenetic hypotheses.
- Published
- 1991
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24. Overexpression of fibronectin induced by diabetes or high glucose: phenomenon with a memory
- Author
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Roberto Sala, Enrico Cagliero, Mara Lorenzi, and Sayon Roy
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Male ,Umbilical Veins ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Kidney Cortex ,Transcription, Genetic ,Endothelium ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Pregnancy ,Reference Values ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Northern blot ,Cells, Cultured ,Regulation of gene expression ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Myocardium ,Rats, Inbred Strains ,medicine.disease ,Fibronectins ,Rats ,Endothelial stem cell ,Fibronectin ,Glucose ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Cell culture ,biology.protein ,Female ,Endothelium, Vascular ,Research Article - Abstract
To identify events and mechanisms that might contribute to the poor reversibility of diabetic complications, we examined whether diabetes or high glucose induces changes in gene expression and whether such changes outlast the presence of the metabolic abnormalities. The study focused on fibronectin because the increased amounts of this glycoprotein found in diabetic tissues and thickened basement membranes are as yet unexplained. In streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats, fibronectin mRNA levels were increased to 304 +/- 295% of control (mean +/- SD) in the kidney cortex (P less than 0.02), and to 271 +/- 273% of control in the heart (P less than 0.02), while actin mRNA levels remained unchanged. Elevation of fibronectin mRNA persisted for weeks after restoration of near-normoglycemia. In cultured human endothelial cells, high glucose-induced overexpression of fibronectin and collagen IV remained detectable after replating and multiple cell divisions in the absence of high glucose. Cells shifted to normal-glucose medium after prolonged exposure to high glucose also exhibited a proliferative advantage over cells chronically maintained in normal glucose. Thus, diabetes increases fibronectin expression in tissues that are known targets of the complications, and the effect is not readily reversible. The in vitro studies suggest that hyperglycemia may be responsible for these events through induction of self-perpetuating changes in gene expression.
- Published
- 1990
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25. The polyol pathway as a mechanism for diabetic retinopathy: attractive, elusive, and resilient
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Mara Lorenzi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,lcsh:Internal medicine ,lcsh:Specialties of internal medicine ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,lcsh:Medicine ,Fructose ,Review Article ,Biology ,lcsh:Diseases of the endocrine glands. Clinical endocrinology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Polyol pathway ,lcsh:RC581-951 ,Aldehyde Reductase ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Sorbitol ,lcsh:RC31-1245 ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Aldose reductase ,lcsh:RC648-665 ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,lcsh:R ,General Medicine ,Diabetic retinopathy ,medicine.disease ,Metabolic pathway ,Endocrinology ,Enzyme ,Glucose ,chemistry ,Oxidation-Reduction - Abstract
The polyol pathway is a two-step metabolic pathway in which glucose is reduced to sorbitol, which is then converted to fructose. It is one of the most attractive candidate mechanisms to explain, at least in part, the cellular toxicity of diabetic hyperglycemia because (i) it becomes active when intracellular glucose concentrations are elevated, (ii) the two enzymes are present in human tissues and organs that are sites of diabetic complications, and (iii) the products of the pathway and the altered balance of cofactors generate the types of cellular stress that occur at the sites of diabetic complications. Inhibition (or ablation) of aldose reductase, the first and rate-limiting enzyme in the pathway, reproducibly prevents diabetic retinopathy in diabetic rodent models, but the results of a major clinical trial have been disappointing. Since then, it has become evident that truly informative indicators of polyol pathway activity and/or inhibition are elusive, but are likely to be other than sorbitol levels if meant to predict accurately tissue consequences. The spectrum of abnormalities known to occur in human diabetic retinopathy has enlarged to include glial and neuronal abnormalities, which in experimental animals are mediated by the polyol pathway. The endothelial cells of human retinal vessels have been noted to have aldose reductase. Specific polymorphisms in the promoter region of the aldose reductase gene have been found associated with susceptibility or progression of diabetic retinopathy. This new knowledge has rekindled interest in a possible role of the polyol pathway in diabetic retinopathy and in methodological investigation that may prepare new clinical trials. Only new drugs that inhibit aldose reductase with higher efficacy and safety than older drugs will make possible to learn if the resilience of the polyol pathway means that it has a role in human diabetic retinopathy that should not have gone undiscovered.
- Published
- 2007
26. A selective aldose reductase inhibitor of a new structural class prevents or reverses early retinal abnormalities in experimental diabetic retinopathy
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James B. Coutcher, Chiara Gerhardinger, Peter J. Oates, Mara Lorenzi, and Wei Sun
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Polymers ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Biology ,Retina ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Polyol pathway ,Aldehyde Reductase ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Aldose reductase ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,Diabetic retinopathy ,medicine.disease ,Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1 ,Aldose reductase inhibitor ,respiratory tract diseases ,Rats ,Up-Regulation ,Pyridazines ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Aldose ,Sorbinil ,medicine.drug ,Retinopathy - Abstract
Previously studied inhibitors of aldose reductase were largely from two chemical classes, spirosuccinamide/hydantoins and carboxylic acids. Each class has its own drawbacks regarding selectivity, in vivo potency, and human safety; as a result, the pathogenic role of aldose reductase in diabetic retinopathy remains controversial. ARI-809 is a recently discovered aldose reductase inhibitor (ARI) of a new structural class, pyridazinones, and has high selectivity for aldose versus aldehyde reductase. To further test the possible pathogenic role of aldose reductase in the development of diabetic retinopathy, we examined the retinal effects of this structurally novel and highly selective ARI in insulinized streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. ARI-809 treatment was initiated 1 month after diabetes induction and continued for 3 months at a dose that inhibited the polyol pathway in the retina of diabetic rats to a similar extent as sorbinil, a poorly selective hydantoin ARI previously shown to prevent retinopathy in this model. ARI-809 improved survival, inhibited cataract development, normalized retinal sorbitol and fructose, and protected the retina from abnormalities that also occur in human diabetes: neuronal apoptosis, glial reactivity, and complement deposition. Because ARI-809 is a novel chemotype highly selective for aldose reductase, these results support the notion that aldose reductase is the key relay that converts hyperglycemia into glucose toxicity in neural and glial cell types in the retina.
- Published
- 2006
27. Aspirin at low-intermediate concentrations protects retinal vessels in experimental diabetic retinopathy through non-platelet-mediated effects
- Author
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Todd Hoehn, Wei Sun, Mara Lorenzi, Zeina Dagher, and Chiara Gerhardinger
- Subjects
Blood Platelets ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Antiplatelet drug ,Ticlopidine ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Apoptosis ,Dinoprostone ,Retina ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Neurons ,Aspirin ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,business.industry ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,Retinal Vessels ,Diabetic retinopathy ,medicine.disease ,Clopidogrel ,Aldose reductase inhibitor ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Sorbinil ,business ,Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors ,medicine.drug ,Retinopathy - Abstract
The prevention of diabetic retinopathy requires drugs that leverage the benefits of glycemic control without adding the burden of side effects. Aspirin at dosages of 1–1.5 g/day has prevented manifestations of diabetic retinal microangiopathy in a clinical trial as well as in studies with dogs. Because lower and safer doses of aspirin could be used if its beneficial effects on retinopathy were due to antithrombotic effects, we compared the effects of a selective antiplatelet drug (clopidogrel) to those of aspirin in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. Clopidogrel did not prevent neuronal apoptosis, glial reactivity, capillary cell apoptosis, or acellular capillaries in the retina of diabetic rats. Aspirin, at doses yielding serum levels (
- Published
- 2005
28. Studies of rat and human retinas predict a role for the polyol pathway in human diabetic retinopathy
- Author
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Veronica Asnaghi, Todd Hoehn, Chiara Gerhardinger, Zeina Dagher, Yong Seek Park, and Mara Lorenzi
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Polymers ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,Imidazolidines ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Polyol pathway ,Aldehyde Reductase ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Sorbitol ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Aged ,Retina ,Aldose reductase ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,Imidazoles ,Retinal Vessels ,Retinal ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Capillaries ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Glucose ,chemistry ,Female ,Pericytes ,Retinopathy - Abstract
The polyol (sorbitol) pathway of glucose metabolism is activated in many cell types when intracellular glucose concentrations are high, and it can generate cellular stress through several mechanisms. The role of the polyol pathway in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy has remained uncertain, in part because it has been examined preferentially in galactose-induced retinopathy and in part because inhibition studies may not have achieved full blockade of the pathway. Having observed that the streptozotocin-induced diabetic rat accurately models many cellular processes characteristic of human diabetic retinopathy, we tested in the diabetic rat if documented inhibition of the polyol pathway prevents a sequence of retinal vascular abnormalities also present in human diabetes. An inhibitor of aldose reductase, the rate-limiting enzyme in the pathway, prevented the early activation of complement in the wall of retinal vessels and the decreased levels of complement inhibitors in diabetic rats, as well as the later apoptosis of vascular pericytes and endothelial cells and the development of acellular capillaries. Both rat and human retinal endothelial cells showed aldose reductase immunoreactivity, and human retinas exposed to high glucose in organ culture increased the production of sorbitol by a degree similar to that observed in the rat. Excess aldose reductase activity can be a mechanism for human diabetic retinopathy.
- Published
- 2004
29. A role for the polyol pathway in the early neuroretinal apoptosis and glial changes induced by diabetes in the rat
- Author
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Veronica Asnaghi, Abidemi Adeboje, Todd Hoehn, Mara Lorenzi, and Chiara Gerhardinger
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Programmed cell death ,Polymers ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Apoptosis ,Imidazolidines ,Retina ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Polyol pathway ,Internal medicine ,Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Aldose reductase ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,Glial fibrillary acidic protein ,biology ,Imidazoles ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,nervous system ,chemistry ,biology.protein ,Sorbinil ,Sorbitol ,Neuroglia - Abstract
We tested the hypothesis that the apoptosis of inner retina neurons and increased expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) observed in the rat after a short duration of diabetes are mediated by polyol pathway activity. Rats with 10 weeks of streptozotocin-induced diabetes and GHb levels of 16 ± 2% (mean ± SD) showed increased retinal levels of sorbitol and fructose, attenuation of GFAP immunostaining in astrocytes, appearance of prominent GFAP expression in Müller glial cells, and a fourfold increase in the number of apoptotic neurons when compared with nondiabetic rats. The cells undergoing apoptosis were immunoreactive for aldose reductase. Sorbinil, an inhibitor of aldose reductase, prevented all abnormalities. Intensive insulin treatment also prevented most abnormalities, despite reducing GHb only to 12 ± 1%. Diabetic mice, known to have much lower aldose reductase activity in other tissues when compared with rats, did not accumulate sorbitol and fructose in the retina and were protected from neuronal apoptosis and GFAP changes in the presence of GHb levels of 14 ± 2%. This work documents discrete cellular consequences of polyol pathway activity in the retina, and it suggests that activation of the pathway and “retinal neuropathy” require severe hyperglycemia and/or high activity of aldose reductase. These findings have implications for how to evaluate the role of the polyol pathway in diabetic retinopathy.
- Published
- 2003
30. IGF-I mRNA and signaling in the diabetic retina
- Author
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Giulio R. Romeo, Francesca Podesta, Mara Lorenzi, Chiara Gerhardinger, and Kimberly D. McClure
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Aging ,Time Factors ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Retina ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Cadaver ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Animals ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Insulin-Like Growth Factor I ,Phosphorylation ,Protein kinase B ,Aged ,Retinal Vessels ,Retinal ,Receptors, Somatomedin ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Capillaries ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Growth Hormone ,sense organs ,Signal transduction ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt ,Retinopathy ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
IGF-I promotes the survival of multiple cell types by activating the IGF-I receptor (IGF-IR), which signals downstream to a serine/threonine kinase termed Akt. Because in diabetes vascular and neural cells of the retina undergo accelerated apoptosis, we examined IGF-I synthesis and signaling in the human and rat diabetic retina. In retinas obtained postmortem from six donors aged 64 ± 8 years with a diabetes duration of 7 ± 5 years, IGF-I mRNA levels were threefold lower than in the retinas of six age-matched nondiabetic donors ( P = 0.005). In the retinas of rats with 2 months9 duration of streptozotocin-induced diabetes, IGF-I mRNA levels were similar to those of control rats, but after 5 months of diabetes they failed to increase to the levels recorded in age-matched controls ( P < 0.02). Retinal IGF-I expression was not altered by hypophysectomy, proving to be growth-hormone independent. IGF-IR levels were modestly increased in the human diabetic retinas ( P = 0.02 vs. nondiabetic retinas) and were unchanged in the diabetic rats. Phosphorylation of the IGF-IR could be measured only in the rat retina, and was not decreased in the diabetic rats (94 ± 18% of control values). In the same diabetic rats, phosphorylation of Akt was 123 ± 21% of control values. There was not yet evidence of increased apoptosis of retinal microvascular cells after 5 months of streptozotocin-induced diabetes. Hence, in the retina of diabetic rats, as in the retina of diabetic human donors, IGF-I mRNA levels are substantially lower than in age-matched nondiabetic controls, whereas IGF-IR activation and signaling are not affected, at least for some time. This finding suggests that in the diabetic retina, the activation of the IGF-IR is modulated by influences that compensate for, or are compensated by, decreased IGF-I synthesis.
- Published
- 2001
31. Bax is increased in the retina of diabetic subjects and is associated with pericyte apoptosis in vivo and in vitro
- Author
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Giulio R. Romeo, Mara Lorenzi, John C. Reed, Wei Hua Liu, Chiara Gerhardinger, Stanislaw Krajewski, and Francesca Podesta
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Blotting, Western ,Molecular Sequence Data ,bcl-X Protein ,Apoptosis ,Retina ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Bcl-2-associated X protein ,Annexin ,Internal medicine ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins ,medicine ,In Situ Nick-End Labeling ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Annexin A5 ,Cells, Cultured ,Aged ,bcl-2-Associated X Protein ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Retinal Vessels ,Retinal ,Diabetic retinopathy ,medicine.disease ,Molecular biology ,Immunohistochemistry ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Glucose ,chemistry ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 ,biology.protein ,Female ,Pericyte ,Pericytes ,Regular Articles - Abstract
Diabetes of even short duration accelerates the death of capillary cells and neurons in the inner retina by a process consistent with apoptosis. We examined whether the process is accompanied by changes in the expression of endogenous regulators of apoptosis. In postmortem retinas of 18 diabetic donors (age 67 +/- 6 years, diabetes duration 9 +/- 4 years) the levels of pro-apoptotic Bax were slightly, but significantly, increased when compared with levels in 20 age-matched nondiabetic donors (P = 0.04). In both groups, Bax localized to vascular and neural cells of the inner retina. Neither pro-apoptotic Bcl-X(S), nor pro-survival Bcl-X(L) appeared affected by diabetes. The levels of these molecules could not be accurately quantitated in lysates of retinal vessels because of variable degrees of glial contamination. However, studies in situ showed in several pericytes, the outer cells of retinal capillaries, intense Bax staining often in conjunction with DNA fragmentation. Bovine retinal pericytes exposed in vitro to high glucose levels for 5 weeks showed elevated levels of Bax (P = 0.03) and increased frequency of annexin V binding, indicative of early apoptosis. Hence, human diabetes selectively alters the expression of Bax in the retina and retinal vascular pericytes at the same time as it causes increased rates of apoptosis. The identical program induced by high glucose in vitro implicates hyperglycemia as a causative factor in vivo, and provides a model for establishing the role of Bax in the accelerated death of retinal cells induced by diabetes.
- Published
- 2000
32. Accelerated death of retinal microvascular cells in human and experimental diabetic retinopathy
- Author
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Mara Lorenzi, Timothy S. Kern, and Masakazu Mizutani
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Biology ,Retina ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Alloxan ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Aged ,TUNEL assay ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,Cell Death ,Microcirculation ,Apoptotic DNA fragmentation ,Retinal ,General Medicine ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Apoptosis ,Female ,Retinopathy ,Research Article - Abstract
To reconstruct the mechanisms for the vasoobliteration that transforms diabetic retinopathy into an ischemic retinopathy, we compared the occurrence of cell death in situ in retinal microvessels of diabetic and nondiabetic individuals. Trypsin digests and sections prepared from the retinas of seven patients (age 67 +/- 7 yr) with .9 +/- 4 yr of diabetes and eight age- and sex-matched nondiabetic controls were studied with the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) reaction which detects preferentially apoptotic DNA fragmentation. The count of total TUNEL+ nuclei was significantly greater in the microvessels of diabetic (13 +/- 12 per one-sixth of retina) than control subjects (1.3 +/- 1.4, P = 0.0016), as were the counts of TUNEL+ pericytes and endothelial cells (P < 0.006). The neural retinas from both diabetic and nondiabetic subjects were uniformly TUNEL-. Retinal microvessels of rats with short duration of experimental diabetes or galactosemia and absent or minimal morphological changes of retinopathy, showed TUNEL+ pericytes and endothelial cells, which were absent in control rats. These findings indicate that (a) diabetes and galactosemia lead to accelerated death in situ of both retinal pericytes and endothelial cells; (b) the event is specific for vascular cells; (c) it precedes histological evidence of retinopathy; and (d) it can be induced by isolated hyperhexosemia. A cycle of accelerated death and renewal of endothelial cells may contribute to vascular architectural changes and, upon exhaustion of replicative life span, to capillary obliteration.
- Published
- 1996
33. Increased expression of basement membrane collagen in human diabetic retinopathy
- Author
-
M. Maiello, Mara Lorenzi, and Sayon Roy
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Gene Expression ,Biology ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Basement Membrane ,Retina ,Reference Values ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Humans ,Aged ,DNA Primers ,Basement membrane ,Messenger RNA ,Diabetic Retinopathy ,Base Sequence ,Microangiopathy ,General Medicine ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Actins ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Female ,Collagen ,Retinopathy ,Research Article - Abstract
Basement membrane thickening is the most prominent and characteristic feature of early diabetic microangiopathy. Unknown is not only the causative process but also whether the thickening reflects increased synthesis of specific components. Because collagen type IV is uniquely present in basement membranes and represents their predominant structural element, we studied its expression in retinas obtained postmortem from five patients with 8 +/- 3 yr of diabetes and six nondiabetic controls. The collagen IV transcript proved to be rare in adult human retina and undetectable by Northern analysis. We thus identified a set of primers and conditions to detect the transcript by the reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and to measure its level relative to an endogenous internal standard (beta-actin mRNA). In the diabetic patients the levels of collagen IV mRNA were increased twofold over levels in controls, whereas the actin mRNA levels were similar in the two groups. Hence, the collagen IV/actin ratio was 0.53 +/- 0.15 in diabetic samples and 0.24 +/- 0.09 in control samples (P = 0.004). These results indicate that diabetes induces a twofold increase in the expression of collagen IV by the cells that synthesize basement membranes in the adult retina (vascular cells). Insofar as high ambient glucose in vitro elicits the same effect, it may be proposed that basement membrane thickening in diabetes results from enhanced synthesis of specialized component molecules sustained by hyperglycemia.
- Published
- 1994
34. Integrin overexpression induced by high glucose and by human diabetes: potential pathway to cell dysfunction in diabetic microangiopathy
- Author
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Francesca Podesta, Timothy Roth, Boeri D, Mary Ann Stepp, and Mara Lorenzi
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Integrins ,Integrin ,Gene Expression ,In Vitro Techniques ,Retina ,Collagen receptor ,Extracellular matrix ,Receptors, Laminin ,Receptors, Fibronectin ,Laminin ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cell Adhesion ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Cell adhesion ,Cells, Cultured ,Extracellular Matrix Proteins ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Middle Aged ,Fibronectins ,Fibronectin ,Endothelial stem cell ,Endocrinology ,Glucose ,Alpha-5 beta-1 ,biology.protein ,Female ,Collagen ,Endothelium, Vascular ,Research Article - Abstract
The nature of the process leading to the acellular nonperfused capillaries of diabetic microangiopathy remains unknown. Because these capillaries manifest thickened basement membranes, we asked whether the process causing deposition of excess extracellular matrix in diabetes modifies cell-matrix interactions in a direction that would compromise cell renewal. In 44 individual isolates of human umbilical vein endothelial cells we observed that high glucose concentrations (30 mM) induce coordinate increases in the levels of mRNAs encoding fibronectin and the fibronectin-specific integrin receptor alpha 5 beta 1 as well as in the cognate proteins. Expression of the integrin subunit alpha 3, component of the alpha 3 beta 1 polyspecific receptor for fibronectin, laminin, and collagen, was also up-regulated by high glucose. Overexpression of integrins correlated with increased cell attachment to exogenous fibronectin and laminin as well as to complex matrix. Moreover, cells exhibited firmer steady-state adhesion to their own matrix. To correlate these in vitro observations with events in human diabetic retinopathy we measured integrin levels in retinal trypsin digests prepared from 10 patients with 8.2 +/- 1.6 (mean +/- SE) years of diabetes and 10 age- and sex-matched nondiabetic controls. Microvessels of diabetic patients showed increased immunostaining for beta 1 integrin (P = 0.025) when compared with control microvessels. These data show that high glucose and diabetes increase integrin expression and thus alter the interaction of vascular endothelial cells with their basement membranes in the direction of firmer cell-matrix adhesion. This could compromise the migration and replication critical to the reendothelialization process and contribute to microvascular occlusion.
- Published
- 1993
35. Maternal diabetes induces increased expression of extracellular matrix components in rat embryos
- Author
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Roberto Sala, Henrik Forsberg, Enrico Cagliero, Ulf J Eriksson, and Mara Lorenzi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Offspring ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Morphogenesis ,Pregnancy in Diabetics ,Gestational Age ,Rats, Mutant Strains ,Congenital Abnormalities ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Extracellular matrix ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Laminin ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Basement membrane ,Fetus ,biology ,medicine.disease ,Blotting, Northern ,Embryo, Mammalian ,Extracellular Matrix ,Fibronectins ,Rats ,Fibronectin ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,biology.protein ,RNA ,Female ,Poly A - Abstract
The mechanisms responsible for the increased incidence of congenital malformations in offspring of diabetic mothers are poorly understood. Because the abnormal metabolic milieu of diabetes induces in the adult organism increased synthesis of basement membrane components, and these molecules play a prominent role in morphogenesis, we investigated whether maternal diabetes or high glucose levels disturb extracellular matrix synthesis in rat embryos. In gestational day 11 embryos, maternal diabetes induced a small but significant increase in laminin B1 (127 ± 40% of control, mean ± SD, P < 0.02) but not in fibronectin mRNA (101 ± 26% of control). Day 12 embryos from diabetic mothers showed a larger increment in laminin B1 (179 ± 91% of control, P < 0.02) and also an increase in fibronectin mRNA (172 ± 73% of control, P < 0.02). A similar increase in the expression of fibronectin was observed in the kidneys and hearts of day 20 fetuses dissected from diabetic rats. High glucose levels mimicked in vitro the effects of maternal diabetes. Day 9 embryos cultured for 48 h in 50 mM D-glucose showed, akin to the day 11 embryos in vivo, an increase in laminin B1 mRNA (129 ± 47% of control) and no changes in fibronectin mRNA (106 ± 35% of control). The finding that maternal diabetes induces increased expression of extracellular matrix components in developing embryos establishes a link with the abnormalities occurring in the chronic complications of diabetes and proposes a new path of investigation for the mechanism of teratogenicity of the diabetic milieu.
- Published
- 1993
36. Defective Myogenic Response to Posture Change in Retinal Vessels of Well-Controlled Type 1 Diabetic Patients with No Retinopathy
- Author
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J. Wallace McMeel, Fatmire Berisha, Julia Kolodjaschna, Gilbert T. Feke, Linda Pitler, and Mara Lorenzi
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Retinal Artery ,Posture ,Hemodynamics ,Blood Pressure ,Muscle, Smooth, Vascular ,Young Adult ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Heart Rate ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Laser-Doppler Flowmetry ,medicine ,Humans ,Retinopathy of Prematurity ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Type 1 diabetes ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,Retinal ,Diabetic retinopathy ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Arterioles ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Blood pressure ,chemistry ,Regional Blood Flow ,Vasoconstriction ,Cardiology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Biomarkers ,Blood Flow Velocity ,Tomography, Optical Coherence ,Retinopathy - Abstract
Purpose The current approach to the prevention of diabetic retinopathy relies on intensive anti-diabetes treatment and is only partially successful. A marker of retinopathy risk would enable strategies of surveillance, screening of adjunct drugs, and targeted drug interventions. The authors sought to identify early abnormalities of retinal vessels that are not prevented by the current therapeutic approach. Methods Retinal thickness (an informer of vascular permeability) and hemodynamic parameters at baseline and longitudinally were measured in 27 subjects (age, 32 ± 9 years [mean ± SD]) with well-controlled type 1 diabetes of 12.4 ± 6.4 years' duration and no retinopathy, and in 27 control subjects. In a subset of 17 patients and 11 controls, the hemodynamic response to reclining, a postural change that increases retinal perfusion pressure, was measured. Results Baseline foveal thickness and hemodynamic parameters were similar in the diabetic and control subjects. Foveal thickness increased over 12 months in the diabetic subjects, from 217 ± 22 μm to 222 ± 20 μm (P = 0.0036), remaining however within the normal range. Reclining uncovered in 47% of diabetic subjects (P = 0.016 compared with controls) an absent myogenic response (i.e., unchanged or increased arterial diameter instead of the normal decrease). The patterns were repeatable. Only the diabetic group with defective vasoconstriction showed widening arterial diameter over 12 months, a change presaging vascular dilatation in diabetic retinopathy. Conclusions Defective myogenic response to pressure was the first detectable abnormality of retinal vessels in subjects with well-controlled type 1 diabetes. Because of its selective occurrence, interpretability in individual patients, and pathogenic potential, the abnormality deserves evaluation as a risk marker for retinopathy.
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- 2010
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37. Increased expression of tissue plasminogen activator and its inhibitor and reduced fibrinolytic potential of human endothelial cells cultured in elevated glucose
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Boeri D, L. Adezati, M. Maiello, Maurizio Vichi, Francesca Podesta, Enrico Cagliero, Patrizio Odetti, and Mara Lorenzi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Endothelium ,Transcription, Genetic ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Biology ,Tissue plasminogen activator ,Umbilical vein ,Antigen ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Humans ,Cells, Cultured ,Confluency ,Fibrinolysis ,Culture Media ,Up-Regulation ,Endothelial stem cell ,Plasminogen Inactivators ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Glucose ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Cell culture ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,Endothelium, Vascular ,Plasminogen activator ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In diabetic patients, elevated plasma levels of t-PA and PAI-1 accompany impaired fibrinolysis. To identify mechanisms for these abnormalities, we examined whether vascular endothelial cells exposed to high glucose upregulate t-PA and PAI-1 production and whether ambient PA activity is decreased concomitantly. In 17 cultures of human umbilical vein endothelial cells grown to confluency in 30 mM glucose, the t-PA antigen released to the medium in 24 h was (median) 52 ng/106 cells (range 10–384) and the PAI-1 antigen was 872 ng/106 cells (range 217–2074)—both greater (P < 0.02) than the amounts released by paired control cultures grown in 5 mM glucose—29 ng/106 cells (range 7.5–216) and 461 ng/106 cells (range 230–3215), respectively. In the presence of high glucose, the steady-state levels of t-PA and PAI-1 mRNAs were increased correspondingly (median 142 and 183% of control, respectively, P < 0.05); high glucose per se and hypertonicity contributed to the upregulation in additive fashion. The PA activity of conditioned medium from cultures exposed to high glucose was 0.4 IU/ml (range 0.2–0.6), which was significantly lower (P < 0.02) than the PA activity of control medium (0.5 IU/ml, range 0.2–0.9). No difference was observed when comparing the PA activities of acidified conditioned media, expected to be depleted of inhibitors. Thus, high glucose coordinately upregulates endothelial t-PA and PAI-1 expression through effects exerted at the pretranslational level and enhanced by even mild degrees of hypertonicity. The decrease in ambient fibrinolytic potential may reflect an overwhelming effect of the increased availability of PAI-1. These findings propose a contributory mechanism for the fibrinolytic abnormalities of diabetes and the thrombotic tendency of the hyperglycemic hyperosmolar state.
- Published
- 1992
38. Expression of genes related to the extracellular matrix in human endothelial cells. Differential modulation by elevated glucose concentrations, phorbol esters, and cAMP
- Author
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T Roth, Sayon Roy, M Maiello, Mara Lorenzi, and Enrico Cagliero
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Transcription, Genetic ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Tissue plasminogen activator ,Basement Membrane ,Extracellular matrix ,Internal medicine ,1-Methyl-3-isobutylxanthine ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Cyclic AMP ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Molecular Biology ,Protein kinase C ,Cells, Cultured ,Protein Kinase C ,Colforsin ,Cell Biology ,Blotting, Northern ,Extracellular Matrix ,Fibronectins ,Endothelial stem cell ,Fibronectin ,Endocrinology ,Glucose ,Microbial Collagenase ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Tissue Plasminogen Activator ,biology.protein ,Interstitial collagenase ,Tetradecanoylphorbol Acetate ,Collagen ,Endothelium, Vascular ,Protein Kinases ,Intracellular ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To identify agents and mechanisms responsible for the thickened basement membranes characteristic of diabetic angiopathy we examined the effects of high glucose (30 mM) on the expression of genes related to extracellular matrix composition and turnover and investigated whether the changes induced by high glucose were mimicked and sustained by activation of protein kinase C or A. In human umbilical vein endothelial cells high glucose increased fibronectin, collagen IV, tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), and plasminogen activator-inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) mRNA levels 2-fold but did not affect type IV and interstitial collagenase expression. Acute treatment with phorbol esters resulted in increased collagen IV, tPA, PAI-1, and interstitial collagenase mRNAs; the type IV collagenase mRNA levels were instead suppressed to 50% of control. Upon longer exposure to phorbol esters (48 h) suppression of fibronectin and PAI-1 mRNAs also occurred. Intracellular elevation of cAMP led to over-expression of fibronectin and type IV collagenase and potentiated the effects of phorbol esters on collagen IV, tPA, and interstitial collagenase expression. The mRNA changes induced by high glucose occurred in the absence of protein kinase C activation or cAMP elevation. These studies indicate that events other than activation of protein kinase C or A bridge high ambient glucose to changes in endothelial cell gene expression that may contribute to diabetic angiopathy.
- Published
- 1991
39. The Blood-Brain Barrier in Diabetes Mellitus
- Author
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Mara Lorenzi
- Subjects
medicine.anatomical_structure ,Tight junction ,Cell surface receptor ,Chemistry ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Capillary endothelial cells ,Blood–brain barrier ,Growth hormone ,medicine.disease ,Systemic circulation ,Growth hormone secretion ,Cell biology - Abstract
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is the function whereby the cerebral microvas-culature selectively shields the brain from the rapidly changing milieu of the systemic circulation. Its strict anatomical counterpart is the tight junctions between capillary endothelial cells, but if the concept of barrier is broadened to mean not only partition and exclusion, but also exchanges and transport, then its morphologic counterpart becomes the whole endothelial cells, with its carrier molecules, membrane receptors, and biosynthetic repertory.
- Published
- 1990
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40. Glucose toxicity for human endothelial cells in culture. Delayed replication, disturbed cell cycle, and accelerated death
- Author
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Silva Toledo, Enrico Cagliero, and Mara Lorenzi
- Subjects
DNA Replication ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mitotic index ,Endothelium ,Cell Survival ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Cell Count ,Vascular permeability ,Biology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Mannitol ,Mitosis ,Cells, Cultured ,Cell Cycle ,Cell cycle ,Endothelial stem cell ,Glucose ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Cell culture ,Blood Vessels ,Cell Division ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Functional and anatomical abnormalities of endothelium may represent a pathway to the increased vascular permeability and accelerated atherosclerosis characteristic of diabetes. To identify whether and how hyperglycemia may compromise the endothelial barrier, we have employed an in vitro system of human endothelial cells obtained from umbilical veins and cultured in elevated glucose concentrations (20 mM). Under these conditions, the achievement of saturation density was substantially delayed, with cell counts throughout most of the growth curve being 70–80% of control (P < 0.002). More profound suppression of cell number was present in cultures exposed to 40 mM glucose. Similar, albeit slightly lesser, effects were observed in cultures exposed to 20 mM mannitol, mimicking the hypertonicity of the high glucose media. The effect of elevated glucose and mannitol was primarily mediated by a decrease in overall rate of replication of the endothelium as documented by the lower mitotic index (P < 0.025). Analysis of the distribution of cells along phases of the cell cycle uncovered in the high glucose cultures a decreased proportion of cells in G0-G1 (70.5 ± 5% versus 73.2 ± 4% in controls, P < 0.05) and an increased proportion of cells in S phase (16.5 ± 2.7% versus 13.5 ± 2.2% in controls, P < 0.01), suggesting that the replicative delay is likely to occur between the phase of DNA synthesis and mitosis. Increased cellular death was specifically observed in the cultures exposed to elevated glucose concentrations (P < 0.05), but it could account for only a minor portion of the deficit in cell number. The mechanism(s) underlying the described ill effects of high glucose/hypertonicity on endothelium and the relevance of such abnormalities to diabetic angiopathy are currently under investigation.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
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41. Studies on the permeability of the blood-brain barrier in experimental diabetes
- Author
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Dennis P. Healy, Richard A. Hawkins, Morton P. Printz, Mara Lorenzi, and J. M. Printz
- Subjects
Male ,Sucrose ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Central nervous system ,Inulin ,Vascular permeability ,Blood–brain barrier ,Horseradish peroxidase ,Permeability ,Streptozocin ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Horseradish Peroxidase ,biology ,Chemistry ,Rats, Inbred Strains ,Streptozotocin ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Blood-Brain Barrier ,Hypothalamus ,biology.protein ,Perfusion ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Whether the increased capillary permeability characteristic of diabetes extends to the blood-brain barrier is presently unclear. We have examined in streptozotocin-diabetic rats the permeability of the blood-brain barrier at the level of 12 discrete brain regions employing 3 intravenous tracers of different molecular weight: sucrose, insulin and horseradish peroxidase. In animals killed 5 min after tracer injection both the sucrose and the inulin spaces were similar to controls. In order to assess whether more prolonged circulation of tracers would uncover leakage, we studied brain spaces at longer intervals after tracer injections. When inulin was allowed to circulate for 15 min prior to killing, animals with 4 weeks of diabetes (but not 2 weeks) exhibited larger inulin spaces at the level of the medio-basal hypothalamus (p less than 0.01), medio-dorsal hypothalamus (p less than 0.05) and periaqueductal gray (p less than 0.01). Horseradish peroxidase, even after 75 min of perfusion, remained confined in both diabetic and control animals to central nervous system areas devoid of blood-brain barrier. Thus, after a relatively short duration of diabetes the blood-brain barrier manifests an increased permeability. It is subtle, limited to some brain regions and selective for low molecular weight tracers.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. FAILURE OF SOMATOSTATIN TO INHIBIT TOLBUTAMIDE-INDUCED INSULIN SECRETION IN PATIENTS WITH INSULINOMAS: A POSSIBLE DIAGNOSTIC TOOL
- Author
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Mara Lorenzi, John H. Karam, John E. Gerich, and Peter H. Forsham
- Subjects
Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Tolbutamide ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Biochemistry ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Insulin ,Medicine ,In patient ,Insulin secretion ,Insulinoma ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Middle Aged ,Adenoma, Islet Cell ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Somatostatin ,Female ,business ,Pancreas ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The effects of somatostatin on tolbutamide-stimulated insulin release were studied in 4 patients with insulin-producing tumors of the pancreas and in 6 normal subjects. In contrast to its effective inhibition of insulin release in normal subjects, somatostatin, without exception, failed to inhibit tolbutamide-induced insulin release in the patients with pancreatic beta-cell tumors. This differential effect of somatostatin may prove useful in the diagnosis of insulin-producing tumors of the pancreas.
- Published
- 1975
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43. Effect of Somatostatin on Plasma Glucose and Insulin Responses to Glucagon and Tolbutamide in Man
- Author
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Mara Lorenzi, Peter H. Forsham, John E. Gerich, and Victor Schneider
- Subjects
Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Glycogenolysis ,Tolbutamide ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Biochemistry ,Glucagon ,Endocrinology ,Bolus (medicine) ,Infusion Procedure ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Humans ,Insulin ,Chemistry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,medicine.disease ,Somatostatin ,Growth Hormone ,Female ,Peptides ,Glycogen ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
To characterize further the mechanism by which somatostatin lowers plasma glucose levels in man, we studied its effect on glucagon-induced glycogenolysis in 6 normal subjects. Additionally, we examined the effect of somatostatin on glucagonand tolbutamide-stimulated insulin release. During infusion of somatostatin (250 μg iv bolus followed by a sustained infusion of 500 μg/hr), plasma glucose responses to glucagon (1 mg iv) exceeded those seen after glucagon administration alone. The resultant hyperglycemia (190–200 mg/100 ml) was unaffected by administration of tolbutamide (1 g iv) and persisted for 15 min after stopping the somatostatin infusion. Plasma insulin remained at basal levels throughout the infusion, despite administration of glucagon and tolbutamide (with coexistent hyperglycemia). Within 15 min after stopping the somatostatin infusion, plasma insulin rose abruptly and plasma glucose declined toward basal levels. These studies indicate that, in man: 1) the hypoglycemic effect of soma...
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
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44. Feedback-controlled dextrose infusion during surgical management of insulinomas
- Author
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Peter H. Forsham, Annette D. Burns, Peterman R. Prosser, Gerold M. Grodsky, Maurice Galante, Mara Lorenzi, Clinton W. Young, and John H. Karam
- Subjects
Blood Glucose ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Insulin ,medicine.medical_treatment ,General Medicine ,Hypoglycemia ,Adenoma, Islet Cell ,medicine.disease ,Feedback ,Surgery ,Pancreatic Neoplasms ,Glucose ,Anesthesia ,Humans ,Medicine ,Female ,Infusions, Parenteral ,business ,Aged ,Monitoring, Physiologic - Abstract
Through the use of a feedback-controlled dextrose infusion system, we obtained continuous monitoring of the blood glucose level in a patient undergoing surgery for multiple pancreatic beta-cell tumors. In addition, this device infused dextrose at variable rates to maintain a predetermined euglycemic level of 90 mg/dl. Before locating the source of excessive insulin production, the maximum dextrose infusion rate of 400 mg/min was required; but after extirpation of multiple insulinomas, the dextrose-infusion rate declined whereas the blood glucose level rose above the preselected level. These results emphasize the usefulness of a monitoring and infusion system not only in protecting the patient from the hazard of hypoglycemia under anesthesia but also as an aid in determining whether all insulin-secreting tumors have been removed.
- Published
- 1979
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45. Differential Effects of<scp>l</scp>-Dopa and Apomorphine on Glucagon Secretion in Man: Evidence Against Central Dopaminergic Stimulation of Glucagon
- Author
-
Nancy J. V. Bohannon, John H. Karam, Mara Lorenzi, Eva Tsalikian, Peter H. Forsham, and John E. Gerich
- Subjects
Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Apomorphine ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Stimulation ,Biochemistry ,Glucagon ,Receptors, Dopamine ,Levodopa ,Endocrinology ,Dopamine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Insulin ,Chemistry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Dopaminergic ,Glucagon secretion ,Prolactin ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Growth Hormone ,Female ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In 6 normal subjects, L-dopa (500 mg PO) and apomorphine (0.6 mg sc) increased circulating growth hormone and suppressed prolactin levels in a parallel and quantitatively similar fashion, but only L-dopa induced a rise in plasma glucagon, glucose, and insulin levels. The failure of apomorphine to affect glucagon secretion, despite a substantial effect on growth hormone and prolactin, was also observed in insulin-dependent diabetics known to exhibit A-cell hyperresponsiveness to various stimuli. In view of the highly dissimilar molecular and pharmacologic characteristics of L-dopa and apomorphine, these data do not exclude a local dopaminergic effect of L-dopa at the pancreatic level, but strongly militate against a central dopaminergic pathway for glucagon stimulation.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
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46. Immunological aspects of diabetes mellitus
- Author
-
Mara Lorenzi
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,business ,medicine.disease - Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Plasma glucagon suppression by phenformin in man
- Author
-
Nancy J. V. Bohannon, John H. Karam, John E. Gerich, Shaikh B. Matin, Peter H. Forsham, and Mara Lorenzi
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Phenformin ,Eating ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Insulin ,Medicine ,Amines ,Gastrin ,Triglyceride ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,Glucagon ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,Endocrinology ,Postprandial ,Before Breakfast ,Mechanism of action ,chemistry ,Regular insulin ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
In an attempt to elucidate the mechanism of action of phenformin, eleven juvenile-onset, insulin-requiring diabetic subjects underwent four different treatment regimens during standard breakfast tests. These four treatments were: control (no insulin or phenformin); insulin alone (15 U regular insulin administered subcutaneously one-half hour before breakfast); phenformin alone (50 mg of the timed-release capsule given twice daily for three days before the study and two and one-half hours before breakfast on the day of study); and phenformin plus insulin (in the amounts and at the times stated above). Phenformin was found to decrease postprandial hyperglycaemia significantly when compared with control values, and its addition to insulin further decreased the postprandial glucose rise below that found with insulin alone (p less than 0.005). These effects were associated with a reduction in early (30-min) postprandial hyperglucagonaemia (p less than 0.05). Triglyceride levels, gastrin secretion, growth hormone levels, and increments of alpha-amino nitrogen were not affected by phenformin. Thls, suppression of postprandial hyperglucagonaemia may be an additional mechanism in the reduction of postprandial hyperglycaemia after phenformin.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Discordance of diabetic microangiopathy in identical twins
- Author
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Eva Tsalikian, Mara Lorenzi, M D Siperstein, M Rosenthal, John H. Karam, John E. Gerich, Peter H. Forsham, and J J O'Donnell
- Subjects
Adult ,Blood Glucose ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Twins ,Monozygotic twin ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,Glucagon ,Basement Membrane ,Diabetic Ketoacidosis ,Muscle hypertrophy ,Pregnancy ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Heredity ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Diseases in Twins ,medicine ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Basement membrane ,Muscles ,Insulin ,Hypertrophy ,Twins, Monozygotic ,medicine.disease ,Capillaries ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Hyperglycemia ,Female ,Identical twins ,Diabetic Angiopathies - Abstract
In a pair of 19-year-old monozygotic twin girls, one developed insulin-dependent, ketosis-prone diabetes at the age of three and has required insulin for the past 16 years. Her identical twin has maintained normal oral and intravenous glucose tolerance with normal insulin release and glucagon suppression. An unequivocal hypertrophy of the muscle capillary basement membrane(1,800 ± 148 Å) was found in the diabetic twin, while a normal thickness of 1,149 ± 62 Å was present in her nondiabetic sister. Follow-up of the present subjects and data from other discordant identical twins who have reached adulthood could determine whether muscle capillary basement membrane hypertrophy is an independent marker of genetic diabetes in adults. Discordance of diabetic microangiopathy in a pair of monozygotic twins has important implications regarding the influence of heredity and environment on diabetic microangiopathy.
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
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49. ROLE OF GLUCAGON IN HUMAN DIABETIC KETOACIDOSIS: STUDIES USING SOMATOSTATIN
- Author
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John E. Gerich, Eva Tsalikian, Mara Lorenzi, Victor Schneider, Peter H. Forsham, Dennis M. Bier, and John H. Karam
- Subjects
Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Diabetic ketoacidosis ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Fulminant ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hydroxybutyrates ,Endogeny ,Fatty Acids, Nonesterified ,Glucagon ,Diabetic Ketoacidosis ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes Mellitus ,medicine ,Humans ,Insulin ,Alanine ,business.industry ,Insulin deficiency ,Glucagon secretion ,medicine.disease ,Somatostatin ,business - Abstract
The present studies demonstrate that endogenous glucagon is hyperglycaemic, lipolytic and ketogenic in man, and that insulin deficiency is necessary, but is in itself not sufficient, to cause fulminant diabetic ketoacidosis. Furthermore, continuous elevation of endogenous glucagon secretion appears to be necessary for the maintenance and continued development of the characteristic metabolic consequences of insulin lack.
- Published
- 1976
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. PLASMA GLUCAGON AND ALANINE RESPONSES TO ACUTE INSULIN DEFICIENCY IN MAN
- Author
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Eva Tsalikian, Dennis M. Bier, John H. Karam, Mara Lorenzi, and John E. Gerich
- Subjects
Adult ,Blood Glucose ,Glycerol ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Diabetic ketoacidosis ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Hydroxybutyrates ,Fatty Acids, Nonesterified ,Biochemistry ,Glucagon ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Endocrinology ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Insulin ,Alanine ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Fatty acid ,medicine.disease ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,chemistry ,Ketone bodies ,business - Abstract
Plasma glucagon levels rose within 1 hr after withdrawal of insulin in 7 juvenile-type diabetics previously kept normoglycemic by prolonged intravenous infusions of insulin. These changes preceded subsequent elevations in plasma alanine levels. Individual rises in plasma glucagon were correlated with elevations in plasma glucose, beta-hydroxybutyrate, free fatty acid, and glycerol levels, suggesting that glucagon may play an important role in the development of diabetic ketoacidosis in man.
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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