Division of Endocrinology, Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Louis University School of Medicine, Edward A. Doisy Research Center, 1100 South Grand Blvd., DRC 354, St. Louis, MO 63104, USA.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2013 Oct 18;440(2):354-8. doi: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2013.09.086. Epub 2013 Sep 25.
Hyperglycemia-induced oxidative stress leads to diabetes-associated damage to the microvasculature of the brain. Pericytes in close proximity to endothelial cells in the brain microvessels are vital to the integrity of the blood-brain barrier and are especially susceptible to oxidative stress. According to our recently published results, streptozotocin-diabetic mouse brain exhibits oxidative stress and loose pericytes by twelve weeks of diabetes, and cerebral pericytes cultured in high glucose media suffer intracellular oxidative stress and apoptosis. Oxidative stress in diabetes is hypothesized to be caused by reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced during hyperglycemia-induced enhanced oxidative metabolism of glucose (respiration). To test this hypothesis, we investigated the effect of high glucose on respiration rate and ROS production in mouse cerebral pericytes. Previously, we showed that pharmacological inhibition of mitochondrial carbonic anhydrases protects the brain from oxidative stress and pericyte loss. The high glucose-induced intracellular oxidative stress and apoptosis of pericytes in culture were also reversed by inhibition of mitochondrial carbonic anhydrases. Therefore, we extended our current study to determine the effect of these inhibitors on high glucose-induced increases in pericyte respiration and ROS. We now report that both the respiration and ROS are significantly increased in pericytes challenged with high glucose. Furthermore, inhibition of mitochondrial carbonic anhydrases significantly slowed down both the rate of respiration and ROS production. These data provide new evidence that pharmacological inhibitors of mitochondrial carbonic anhydrases, already in clinical use, may prove beneficial in protecting the brain from oxidative stress caused by ROS produced as a consequence of hyperglycemia-induced enhanced respiration.
高血糖引起的氧化应激导致糖尿病相关的大脑微血管损伤。脑微血管内皮细胞附近的周细胞对于血脑屏障的完整性至关重要,并且特别容易受到氧化应激的影响。根据我们最近发表的研究结果,12 周糖尿病的链脲佐菌素诱导的糖尿病小鼠大脑表现出氧化应激和周细胞松散,并且在高葡萄糖培养基中培养的脑周细胞遭受细胞内氧化应激和细胞凋亡。糖尿病中的氧化应激假设是由高血糖诱导的葡萄糖增强氧化代谢(呼吸)过程中产生的活性氧(ROS)引起的。为了验证这一假设,我们研究了高葡萄糖对小鼠脑周细胞呼吸率和 ROS 产生的影响。先前,我们表明抑制线粒体碳酸酐酶可保护大脑免受氧化应激和周细胞丢失。高葡萄糖诱导的培养中周细胞的细胞内氧化应激和细胞凋亡也被抑制线粒体碳酸酐酶逆转。因此,我们扩展了目前的研究,以确定这些抑制剂对高葡萄糖诱导的周细胞呼吸和 ROS 增加的影响。我们现在报告说,高葡萄糖刺激的周细胞的呼吸和 ROS 都显著增加。此外,抑制线粒体碳酸酐酶显著减缓了呼吸和 ROS 产生的速度。这些数据提供了新的证据,即已经在临床应用的线粒体碳酸酐酶的药理学抑制剂可能有助于保护大脑免受高血糖诱导的增强呼吸产生的 ROS 引起的氧化应激。