McDermott A M, Kern T S, Murphy C J
Department of Surgical Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706, USA.
Curr Eye Res. 1998 Sep;17(9):924-32. doi: 10.1076/ceyr.17.9.924.5133.
To examine the effect of elevated extracellular glucose, thus simulating diabetes, on migration, adhesion and proliferation of SV40 transformed human corneal epithelial (HCE) cells.
HCE cells were maintained in serum supplemented media containing 5 mM, 17.5 mM or 38 mM D-glucose. Cell migration was determined using Blind well chambers fitted with fibronectin/collagen I coated filters. In adhesion experiments, cells were allowed to adhere to extracellular matrix protein-coated wells for 90 min at 37 degrees C. Non-adherent cells were removed by washing, then the fluorochrome calcein-AM was added to quantitate the number of attached cells. Proliferation was determined by plating the cells at low density, then quantitating viable cells with calcein-AM 5 to 7 days later.
Raising extracellular glucose from 5 mM to 17.5 mM significantly increased cell migration by 42%. When glucose was further raised to 38 mM, migration was not significantly different from that in 5 mM glucose. Adhesion to fibronectin and collagen I (but not IV) was significantly increased (62% and 32% respectively) when cells were cultured in 17.5 mM glucose. Similarly, proliferation was increased by 44%. Adhesion and proliferation tended to be decreased at 38 mM compared to 17.5 mM glucose, but not significantly so. In the presence of 5 mM glucose and mannitol (12.5 mM or 33 mM), neither migration, adhesion nor proliferation were significantly different from that in 5 mM glucose alone.
Elevated extracellular glucose modulates migration, adhesion and proliferation of HCE cells. The effects are dependent on the concentration of glucose and are not due to changes in osmolality since mannitol failed to produce similar results. Our in vitro findings suggest that high-glucose effects may directly contribute to the etiology of impaired corneal wound healing in diabetes.
通过模拟糖尿病状态提高细胞外葡萄糖浓度,研究其对SV40转化的人角膜上皮(HCE)细胞迁移、黏附和增殖的影响。
将HCE细胞培养于添加了5 mM、17.5 mM或38 mM D-葡萄糖的含血清培养基中。使用装有纤连蛋白/Ⅰ型胶原包被滤膜的盲孔小室测定细胞迁移。在黏附实验中,使细胞在37℃下于细胞外基质蛋白包被的孔中黏附90分钟。通过洗涤去除未黏附细胞,然后加入荧光染料钙黄绿素-AM定量黏附细胞数量。通过低密度接种细胞,然后在5至7天后用钙黄绿素-AM定量活细胞来测定增殖情况。
将细胞外葡萄糖浓度从5 mM提高到17.5 mM可使细胞迁移显著增加42%。当葡萄糖进一步提高到38 mM时,迁移与5 mM葡萄糖时无显著差异。当细胞在17.5 mM葡萄糖中培养时,对纤连蛋白和Ⅰ型胶原(而非Ⅳ型胶原)的黏附显著增加(分别增加62%和32%)。同样,增殖增加了44%。与17.5 mM葡萄糖相比,38 mM时黏附和增殖趋于降低,但无显著差异。在5 mM葡萄糖和甘露醇(12.5 mM或33 mM)存在的情况下,迁移、黏附和增殖与单独使用5 mM葡萄糖时均无显著差异。
细胞外葡萄糖浓度升高可调节HCE细胞的迁移、黏附和增殖。这些作用取决于葡萄糖浓度,且不是由渗透压变化引起的,因为甘露醇未能产生类似结果。我们的体外研究结果表明,高糖效应可能直接导致糖尿病患者角膜伤口愈合受损的病因。