Hou Juanni, Wang Xiong, Li Yong, Hou Jun, Li Xiuchuan, Zhang Xinqin, Pei Haifeng, Yang Dachun
Department of Digestion, The General Hospital of Western Theater Command, Chengdu 610083, China; Department of Cardiology, The General Hospital of Western Theater Command, Chengdu 610083, China.
Department of Cardiology, The General Hospital of Western Theater Command, Chengdu 610083, China.
Mitochondrion. 2022 Jul;65:150-160. doi: 10.1016/j.mito.2022.06.005. Epub 2022 Jun 30.
Microvascular protection is the main mechanism of metformin against diabetic complications. Cardiac microvascular endothelial cells (CMECs) are the basic component of cardiac microvessels, and they suffer from oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction under type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Translocase of the outer mitochondrial membrane 70 (Tom70) improves mitochondrial dysfunction, but its role in the hearts of T2DM patients remains unclear. The purpose of this study was to demonstrate the protective effect of metformin on diabetic cardiac microvascular injury and to identify the role of Tom70 in this effect. T2DM mice were established by multiple intraperitoneal injections of low-dose streptozotocin and 12-week high-fat feeding. CMECs were isolated and cultured with normal glucose (NG), high glucose (HG), and HG plus high fat (HG-HF) media. The results indicated that long-term metformin treatment partly reversed cardiovascular complication and mitigated cardiac microvascular injury in T2DM. In addition, exposure to HG-HF led to CMEC damage, aggravated oxidative stress, aggravated mitochondrial dysfunction, and reduced mitochondrial Tom70 expression, whereas upregulation of Tom70 significantly ameliorated these injuries. Furthermore, metformin treatment promoted Tom70 expression and effectively reversed CMEC injury induced by HG-HF. However, all of these effects were interrupted after Tom70 was knocked down. In conclusion, T2DM damages microvascular integrity by activating a cycle of decreased Tom70 expression, mitochondrial dysfunction, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) overload in CMECs. However, metformin suppresses oxidative stress, relieves mitochondrial dysfunction, and promotes the expression of Tom70, ultimately ameliorating diabetic microvascular injury and heart complications.
微血管保护是二甲双胍预防糖尿病并发症的主要机制。心脏微血管内皮细胞(CMECs)是心脏微血管的基本组成部分,在2型糖尿病(T2DM)状态下会遭受氧化应激和线粒体功能障碍。线粒体外膜转位酶70(Tom70)可改善线粒体功能障碍,但其在T2DM患者心脏中的作用尚不清楚。本研究旨在证实二甲双胍对糖尿病性心脏微血管损伤的保护作用,并明确Tom70在此作用中的角色。通过多次腹腔注射低剂量链脲佐菌素并进行12周高脂喂养建立T2DM小鼠模型。将CMECs分离出来,分别用正常葡萄糖(NG)、高糖(HG)以及高糖加高脂(HG-HF)培养基进行培养。结果表明,长期使用二甲双胍治疗可部分逆转心血管并发症,并减轻T2DM小鼠的心脏微血管损伤。此外,暴露于HG-HF会导致CMECs损伤、氧化应激加剧、线粒体功能障碍加重以及线粒体Tom70表达降低,而Tom70的上调可显著改善这些损伤。此外,二甲双胍治疗可促进Tom70表达,并有效逆转HG-HF诱导的CMECs损伤。然而,在敲低Tom70后,所有这些作用均被阻断。总之,T2DM通过激活CMECs中Tom70表达降低、线粒体功能障碍和活性氧(ROS)过载的循环来破坏微血管完整性。然而,二甲双胍可抑制氧化应激、缓解线粒体功能障碍并促进Tom70表达,最终改善糖尿病微血管损伤和心脏并发症。