Davis Bradley J, Xie Zhonglin, Viollet Benoit, Zou Ming-Hui
Vascular Research Laboratory, Department of Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA.
Diabetes. 2006 Feb;55(2):496-505. doi: 10.2337/diabetes.55.02.06.db05-1064.
Metformin, one of most commonly used drugs for the treatment of type 2 diabetes, improves vascular endothelial functions and reduces cardiovascular events in patients with type 2 diabetes, although its mechanisms remain unknown. The current study aimed to elucidate how metformin improves endothelial functions. Exposure of cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells (BAECs) to clinically relevant concentrations of metformin (50-500 micromol/l) dose-dependently increased serine-1179 (Ser1179) phosphorylation (equal to human Ser1179) of endothelial nitric oxide (NO) synthase (eNOS) as well as its association with heat shock protein (hsp)-90, resulting in increased activation of eNOS and NO bioactivity (cyclic GMP). These effects of metformin were mimicked or completely abrogated by adenoviral overexpression of a constitutively active 5'-AMP-activated kinase (AMPK) mutant or a kinase-inactive AMPK-alpha, respectively. Furthermore, administration of metformin as well as 5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide ribonucleoside, an AMPK agonist, significantly increased eNOS Ser1179 phosphorylation, NO bioactivity, and coimmunoprecipitation of eNOS with hsp90 in wild-type C57BL6 mice but not in AMPK-alpha1 knockout mice, suggesting that AMPK is required for metformin-enhanced eNOS activation in vivo. Finally, incubation of BAECs with clinically relevant concentrations of metformin dramatically attenuated high-glucose (30 mmol/l)-induced reduction in the association of hsp90 with eNOS, which resulted in increased NO bioactivity with a reduction in overexpression of adhesion molecules and endothelial apoptosis caused by high-glucose exposure. Taken together, our results indicate that metformin might improve vascular endothelial functions in diabetes by increasing AMPK-dependent, hsp90-mediated eNOS activation.
二甲双胍是治疗2型糖尿病最常用的药物之一,可改善2型糖尿病患者的血管内皮功能并减少心血管事件,但其机制尚不清楚。当前的研究旨在阐明二甲双胍如何改善内皮功能。将培养的牛主动脉内皮细胞(BAECs)暴露于临床相关浓度的二甲双胍(50 - 500微摩尔/升),可剂量依赖性地增加内皮型一氧化氮合酶(eNOS)丝氨酸-1179(Ser1179,等同于人类Ser1179)的磷酸化以及其与热休克蛋白(hsp)-90的结合,从而导致eNOS激活增加和NO生物活性(环磷酸鸟苷)增加。二甲双胍的这些作用分别被组成型活性5'-AMP激活激酶(AMPK)突变体或激酶失活的AMPK-α的腺病毒过表达模拟或完全消除。此外,给予二甲双胍以及AMPK激动剂5-氨基咪唑-4-甲酰胺核苷,可显著增加野生型C57BL6小鼠中eNOS Ser1179的磷酸化、NO生物活性以及eNOS与hsp90的共免疫沉淀,但在AMPK-α1基因敲除小鼠中则无此作用,这表明AMPK是二甲双胍在体内增强eNOS激活所必需的。最后,将BAECs与临床相关浓度的二甲双胍孵育,可显著减弱高糖(30毫摩尔/升)诱导的hsp90与eNOS结合的减少,这导致NO生物活性增加,同时高糖暴露引起的黏附分子过表达和内皮细胞凋亡减少。综上所述,我们的结果表明,二甲双胍可能通过增加AMPK依赖性、hsp90介导的eNOS激活来改善糖尿病患者的血管内皮功能。