Analysis of the Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) type 2 diabetic rat model suggests a neurotrophic role for insulin/IGF-1 in diabetic autonomic neuropathy

被引:71
作者
Schmidt, RE
Dorsey, DA
Beaudet, LN
Peterson, RG
机构
[1] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Pathol & Immunol, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
[2] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Div Neuropathol, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
[3] Indiana Univ, Sch Med, Dept Anat, Indianapolis, IN 46204 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1016/S0002-9440(10)63626-7
中图分类号
R36 [病理学];
学科分类号
100104 ;
摘要
Dysfunction of the autonomic nervous system is a recognized complication of diabetes. Neuroaxonal dystrophy (NAD), a distinctive axonopathy involving distal axons; and synapses, represents the neuropathologic hallmark of diabetic sympathetic autonomic neuropathy in human and several insulinopenic experimental rodent models. Recent studies have suggested that loss of the neurotrophic effects of insulin and/or IGF-I on sympathetic neurons and not hyperglycemia per se, may underlie the development of sympathetic NAD. The streptozotocin (STZ)-diabetic and BB/W rat, the most commonly used experimental rodent models, develop marked hyperglycemia and concomitant deficiency in both circulating insulin and IGF-I. These animals reproducibly develop NAD in nerve terminals in the prevertebral sympathetic ganglia and the distal portions of noradrenergic ileal mesenteric nerves. The Zucker Diabetic Fatty (ZDF) rat, an animal model of type 2 diabetes, also develops severe hyperglycemia comparable to that in the STZ- and BB/W-diabetic rat models, although in the presence of hyperinsulinemia. in our study, 23)F rats maintained for 6 to 7 months in a severely diabetic state, as assessed by plasma glucose and glycated hemoglobin levels, maintained significant hyperinsulinemia and normal levels of plasma IGF-I at sacrifice. NAD did not develop in diabetic ZDF rat sympathetic ganglia and ileal mesenteric nerves as assessed by quantitative ultrastructural techniques, which is in dramatic contrast to neuropathologic findings in comparably hyperglycemic 6-month STZ-diabetic insulinopenic rats. These data combined with our previous results argue very strongly that hyperglycemia is not the critical and sufficient element in the pathogenesis of diabetes-induced NAD, rather that it is the loss of trophic support, most likely of IGF-I or insulin, that causes NAD.
引用
收藏
页码:21 / 28
页数:8
相关论文
共 52 条
[1]   EFFECT OF DIABETES AND ITS CONTROL ON INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH-FACTORS IN THE YOUNG SUBJECT WITH TYPE-I DIABETES [J].
AMIEL, SA ;
SHERWIN, RS ;
HINTZ, RL ;
GERTNER, JM ;
PRESS, CM ;
TAMBORLANE, WV .
DIABETES, 1984, 33 (12) :1175-1179
[2]   DECREASE IN SERUM RECEPTOR-REACTIVE SOMATOMEDIN IN DIABETES [J].
BAXTER, RC ;
BROWN, AS ;
TURTLE, JR .
HORMONE AND METABOLIC RESEARCH, 1979, 11 (03) :216-220
[3]   THE ROLE OF INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH FACTOR-I IN GROWTH OF DIABETIC RATS [J].
BINZ, K ;
ZAPF, J ;
FROESCH, ER .
ACTA ENDOCRINOLOGICA, 1989, 121 (05) :628-632
[4]   Diabetes-induced suppression of IGF-1 and its receptor mRNA levels in rat superior cervical ganglia [J].
Bitar, MS ;
Pilcher, CWT ;
Khan, I ;
Waldbillig, RJ .
DIABETES RESEARCH AND CLINICAL PRACTICE, 1997, 38 (02) :73-80
[5]   Neurodegeneration is associated to changes in serum insulin-like growth factors [J].
Busiguina, S ;
Fernandez, AM ;
Barrios, V ;
Clark, R ;
Tolbert, DL ;
Berciano, J ;
Torres-Aleman, I .
NEUROBIOLOGY OF DISEASE, 2000, 7 (06) :657-665
[6]  
Cheng HL, 1996, J NEUROCHEM, V66, P525
[8]   Effect of dietary fat on the development of non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus in obese Zucker diabetic fatty male and female rats [J].
Corsetti, JP ;
Sparks, JD ;
Peterson, RG ;
Smith, RL ;
Sparks, CE .
ATHEROSCLEROSIS, 2000, 148 (02) :231-241
[9]   ELEVATED PLASMA INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH-FACTOR BINDING PROTEIN-1 LEVELS IN TYPE-1 (INSULIN-DEPENDENT) DIABETIC-PATIENTS WITH PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY [J].
CROSBY, SR ;
TSIGOS, C ;
ANDERTON, CD ;
GORDON, C ;
YOUNG, RJ ;
WHITE, A .
DIABETOLOGIA, 1992, 35 (09) :868-872
[10]   NERVE REGENERATION AND SERUM LEVELS OF INSULIN-LIKE GROWTH FACTOR-I IN RATS WITH STREPTOZOTOCIN-INDUCED INSULIN DEFICIENCY [J].
EKSTROM, PAR ;
KANJE, M ;
SKOTTNER, A .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 1989, 496 (1-2) :141-147