Obrosova Irina G, Julius Ulrich A
Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Louisiana State University System, Baton Rouge, 70808, USA.
Curr Vasc Pharmacol. 2005 Jul;3(3):267-83. doi: 10.2174/1570161054368634.
Chronic complications of diabetes mellitus e.a. diabetic nephropathy, neuropathy and retinopathy develop in at least 30-50% of patients with both Type 1 (insulin-dependent) and Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes, and are the major cause of increased morbidity and mortality. The ultimate consequences of diabetes complications include renal failure, foot ulceration and amputation, and blindness. The magnitude of the problem and its economic impact make extremely important to understand the natural history of chronic diabetes complications and to identify more successful preventive and therapeutic options. The pathogenesis of diabetes complications involves multiple mechanisms. The importance of vascular component is well recognized in diabetic retinopathy, which is primarily a vascular disease, as well as diabetic nephropathy developing as a result of complex interplay between hemodynamic and metabolic factors. The importance of vascular versus non-vascular mechanisms in the pathogenesis of diabetic neuropathy remains a subject of debate. Studies in animal and cell culture models revealed that such mechanisms as increased aldose reductase activity, non-enzymatic glycation/glycoxidation, activation of protein kinase C, impaired growth factor support, enhanced oxidative/nitrosative stress, and its downstream effectors such as mitogen-activated protein kinase activation, inflammatory response, endothelin-1 overexpression and impaired Ca(++) signaling, play an important role in all three tissue-targets for diabetes complications i.e. kidney, retina and peripheral nerve. Evidence for important role of the downstream effector of free radical and oxidant-induced DNA injury, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase activation, is emerging. This review describes recent studies addressing the role for poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase activation in diabetic nephropathy, neuropathy and retinopathy.
糖尿病的慢性并发症,如糖尿病肾病、神经病变和视网膜病变,在至少30%-50%的1型(胰岛素依赖型)和2型(非胰岛素依赖型)糖尿病患者中出现,并且是发病率和死亡率增加的主要原因。糖尿病并发症的最终后果包括肾衰竭、足部溃疡和截肢以及失明。该问题的严重程度及其经济影响使得了解慢性糖尿病并发症的自然病程并确定更有效的预防和治疗方案极为重要。糖尿病并发症的发病机制涉及多种机制。血管成分在糖尿病视网膜病变(主要是一种血管疾病)以及因血流动力学和代谢因素之间复杂相互作用而发展的糖尿病肾病中的重要性已得到充分认识。血管机制与非血管机制在糖尿病神经病变发病机制中的重要性仍存在争议。动物和细胞培养模型研究表明,醛糖还原酶活性增加、非酶糖基化/糖氧化、蛋白激酶C激活、生长因子支持受损、氧化/亚硝化应激增强及其下游效应物如丝裂原活化蛋白激酶激活、炎症反应、内皮素-1过表达和钙信号受损等机制,在糖尿病并发症的所有三个组织靶点即肾脏、视网膜和周围神经中都起着重要作用。自由基和氧化剂诱导的DNA损伤的下游效应物多聚(ADP-核糖)聚合酶激活的重要作用的证据正在出现。这篇综述描述了近期关于多聚(ADP-核糖)聚合酶激活在糖尿病肾病、神经病变和视网膜病变中作用的研究。