Greene D A, Lattimer-Greene S, Sima A A
Department of Internal Medicine, Michigan Diabetes Research and Training Center, University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor.
Crit Rev Neurobiol. 1989;5(2):143-219.
A unifying metabolic hypothesis completely accounting for the development of one or more of the chronic complications of diabetes on the basis of a single aspect of disturbed glucose metabolism resulting from insulin deficiency and/or hyperglycemia has been sought by clinical and basic scientists for decades. A growing body of loosely related but internally consistent scientific data obtained from cultured cells, incubated tissue preparations, animal models, and man implicate sorbitol- and glucose-induced myo-inositol depletion and altered phosphoinositide metabolism in a series of secondary biochemical, functional, and architectural abnormalities in the PNS in diabetes. These early metabolically based functional and structural changes simulate those that characterize human diabetic neuropathy. Can abnormal phosphoinositide metabolism in diabetic nerve thereby by itself explain the development of chronic diabetic neuropathy with all of its clinical complexity and heterogeneity? Almost certainly not. Even if the entire contribution of hyperglycemia to the development of diabetic neuropathy were mediated by secondary abnormalities in phosphoinositide metabolism, other factors must also play a role. Witness the differences in the histopathological picture of neuropathy in patients with IDDM and NIDDM despite similar durations and severity of diabetes, the apparent influence of age and gender on the appearance of early neuropathy in patients with IDDM, and the association of alcohol consumption with diabetic neuropathy. While early metabolic and functional disturbances in diabetic nerve such as impaired (Na,K)-ATPase function and paranodal swelling are empirically attributable to abnormal myo-inositol and phosphoinositide metabolism, more advanced abnormalities such as axo-glial dysjunction may reflect superimposed independent biochemical and/or hormonal defects (although, as mentioned previously, aldose reductase inhibition decreases axo-glial dysjunction in diabetic humans). The PNS has only a limited repertoire of responses to a variety of insults, so that Wallerian degeneration, axonal atrophy, impaired axonal transport, and dystrophic changes in diabetic neuropathy may represent multiple factors. On the other hand, the increasingly recognized importance of the phosphoinositide cascade in neuromodulation may attribute a progressively wider range of disturbances in the diabetic PNS to myo-inositol depletion and associated defects in phosphoinositide metabolism. Thus, while all effects of aldose reductase inhibitors in the PNS of diabetic rats have been reproduced by myo-inositol supplementation when this alternative intervention has been tested, the exact role of phosphoinositide metabolism in most of these responses is not well understood.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
几十年来,临床和基础科学家一直在探寻一种统一的代谢假说,该假说能基于胰岛素缺乏和/或高血糖导致的葡萄糖代谢紊乱的单一因素,全面解释糖尿病一种或多种慢性并发症的发生发展。从培养细胞、离体组织标本、动物模型和人体获得的越来越多的虽松散相关但内部一致的科学数据表明,山梨醇和葡萄糖诱导的肌醇耗竭以及磷酸肌醇代谢改变,在糖尿病患者外周神经系统(PNS)一系列继发性生化、功能和结构异常中起作用。这些早期基于代谢的功能和结构变化类似于人类糖尿病神经病变的特征性变化。那么,糖尿病神经中异常的磷酸肌醇代谢本身能否解释具有所有临床复杂性和异质性的慢性糖尿病神经病变的发生发展呢?几乎可以肯定不能。即使高血糖对糖尿病神经病变发生发展的全部作用是由磷酸肌醇代谢的继发性异常介导的,其他因素也必定起作用。例如,尽管1型糖尿病(IDDM)和2型糖尿病(NIDDM)患者糖尿病病程和严重程度相似,但神经病变的组织病理学表现仍存在差异;年龄和性别对IDDM患者早期神经病变的出现有明显影响;饮酒与糖尿病神经病变有关。虽然糖尿病神经早期的代谢和功能紊乱,如(钠,钾)-ATP酶功能受损和结旁肿胀,经验证可归因于肌醇和磷酸肌醇代谢异常,但更晚期的异常,如轴突-神经胶质分离,可能反映了叠加的独立生化和/或激素缺陷(尽管如前所述,醛糖还原酶抑制可减少糖尿病患者的轴突-神经胶质分离)。PNS对各种损伤的反应模式有限,因此沃勒变性、轴突萎缩、轴突运输受损以及糖尿病神经病变中的营养不良性改变可能代表多种因素。另一方面,磷酸肌醇级联反应在神经调节中日益被认识到的重要性,可能使糖尿病PNS中越来越多的紊乱归因于肌醇耗竭和磷酸肌醇代谢相关缺陷。因此,虽然当进行这种替代干预测试时,补充肌醇已重现了醛糖还原酶抑制剂在糖尿病大鼠PNS中的所有作用,但磷酸肌醇代谢在大多数这些反应中的确切作用尚不清楚。(摘要截选至400字)