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Regulation of high glucose-induced apoptosis of brain pericytes by mitochondrial CA VA: A specific target for prevention of diabetic cerebrovascular pathology.
Price, Tulin O; Sheibani, Nader; Shah, Gul N.
Affiliation
  • Price TO; Division of Endocrinology, Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Louis University School of Medicine, Edward A. Doisy Research Center, 1100 South Grand Blvd, DRC 354, Saint Louis, MO 63104, USA.
  • Sheibani N; Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
  • Shah GN; Division of Endocrinology, Department of Internal Medicine, Saint Louis University School of Medicine, Edward A. Doisy Research Center, 1100 South Grand Blvd, DRC 354, Saint Louis, MO 63104, USA. Electronic address: shahgn@slu.edu.
Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis ; 1863(4): 929-935, 2017 04.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28131914
ABSTRACT
Events responsible for cerebrovascular disease in diabetes are not fully understood. Pericyte loss is an early event that leads to endothelial cell death, microaneurysms, and cognitive impairment. A biochemical mechanism underlying pericyte loss is rapid respiration (oxidative metabolism of glucose). This escalation in respiration results from free influx of glucose into insulin-insensitive tissues in the face of high glucose levels in the blood. Rapid respiration generates superoxide, the precursor to all reactive oxygen species (ROS), and results in pericyte death. Respiration is regulated by carbonic anhydrases (CAs) VA and VB, the two isozymes expressed in mitochondria, and their pharmacologic inhibition with topiramate reduces respiration, ROS, and pericyte death. Topiramate inhibits both isozymes; therefore, in the earlier studies, their individual roles were not discerned. In a recent genetic study, we showed that mitochondrial CA VA plays a significant role in regulation of reactive oxygen species and pericyte death. The role of CA VB was not addressed. In this report, genetic knockdown and overexpression studies confirm that mitochondrial CA VA regulates respiration in pericytes, whereas mitochondrial CA VB does not contribute significantly. Identification of mitochondrial CA VA as a sole regulator of respiration provides a specific target to develop new drugs with fewer side effects that may be better tolerated and can protect the brain from diabetic injury. Since similar events occur in the capillary beds of other insulin-insensitive tissues such as the eye and kidney, these drugs may also slow the onset and progression of diabetic disease in these tissues.
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Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Brain / Cerebrovascular Disorders / Apoptosis / Pericytes / Carbonic Anhydrase V / Mitochondrial Proteins / Diabetic Angiopathies / Mitochondria Limits: Animals Language: En Year: 2017 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Brain / Cerebrovascular Disorders / Apoptosis / Pericytes / Carbonic Anhydrase V / Mitochondrial Proteins / Diabetic Angiopathies / Mitochondria Limits: Animals Language: En Year: 2017 Type: Article