Reddy Marpadga A, Zhang Erli, Natarajan Rama
Department of Diabetes and Metabolic Diseases Research, Beckman Research Institute of City of Hope, 1500 East Duarte Road, Duarte, CA, 91010, USA.
Diabetologia. 2015 Mar;58(3):443-55. doi: 10.1007/s00125-014-3462-y. Epub 2014 Dec 7.
The incidence of diabetes and its associated micro- and macrovascular complications is greatly increasing worldwide. The most prevalent vascular complications of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes include nephropathy, retinopathy, neuropathy and cardiovascular diseases. Evidence suggests that both genetic and environmental factors are involved in these pathologies. Clinical trials have underscored the beneficial effects of intensive glycaemic control for preventing the progression of complications. Accumulating evidence suggests a key role for epigenetic mechanisms such as DNA methylation, histone post-translational modifications in chromatin, and non-coding RNAs in the complex interplay between genes and the environment. Factors associated with the pathology of diabetic complications, including hyperglycaemia, growth factors, oxidant stress and inflammatory factors can lead to dysregulation of these epigenetic mechanisms to alter the expression of pathological genes in target cells such as endothelial, vascular smooth muscle, retinal and cardiac cells, without changes in the underlying DNA sequence. Furthermore, long-term persistence of these alterations to the epigenome may be a key mechanism underlying the phenomenon of 'metabolic memory' and sustained vascular dysfunction despite attainment of glycaemic control. Current therapies for most diabetic complications have not been fully efficacious, and hence a study of epigenetic mechanisms that may be involved is clearly warranted as they can not only shed novel new insights into the pathology of diabetic complications, but also lead to the identification of much needed new drug targets. In this review, we highlight the emerging role of epigenetics and epigenomics in the vascular complications of diabetes and metabolic memory.
在全球范围内,糖尿病及其相关的微血管和大血管并发症的发病率正在大幅上升。1型和2型糖尿病最常见的血管并发症包括肾病、视网膜病变、神经病变和心血管疾病。有证据表明,遗传因素和环境因素都与这些病理状况有关。临床试验强调了强化血糖控制对预防并发症进展的有益作用。越来越多的证据表明,表观遗传机制,如DNA甲基化、染色质中的组蛋白翻译后修饰以及非编码RNA,在基因与环境之间的复杂相互作用中发挥着关键作用。与糖尿病并发症病理相关的因素,包括高血糖、生长因子、氧化应激和炎症因子,可导致这些表观遗传机制失调,从而改变靶细胞(如内皮细胞、血管平滑肌细胞、视网膜细胞和心肌细胞)中病理基因的表达,而基础DNA序列并无变化。此外,表观基因组的这些改变长期持续存在,可能是“代谢记忆”现象以及尽管实现了血糖控制但血管功能仍持续异常的关键机制。目前针对大多数糖尿病并发症的治疗方法尚未完全有效,因此,对可能涉及的表观遗传机制进行研究显然是必要的,因为它们不仅能为糖尿病并发症的病理状况提供新的见解,还能有助于确定急需的新药物靶点。在这篇综述中,我们重点介绍了表观遗传学和表观基因组学在糖尿病血管并发症及代谢记忆中的新作用。