Journal of Surgical Research 2015-06-01

Nitric oxide affects UbcH10 levels differently in type 1 and type 2 diabetic rats.

Monica P Rodriguez, Nick D Tsihlis, Zachary M Emond, Zheng Wang, Vinit N Varu, Qun Jiang, Janet M Vercammen, Melina R Kibbe

Index: J. Surg. Res. 196 , 180-9, (2015)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Nitric oxide (NO) more effectively inhibits neointimal hyperplasia in type 2 diabetic versus nondiabetic and type 1 diabetic rodents. NO also decreases the ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme UbcH10, which is critical to cell-cycle regulation. This study seeks to determine whether UbcH10 levels in the vasculature of diabetic animal models account for the differential efficacy of NO at inhibiting neointimal hyperplasia.Vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) harvested from nondiabetic lean Zucker (LZ) and type 2 diabetic Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) rats were exposed to high glucose (25 mM) and high insulin (24 nM) conditions to mimic the diabetic environment in vitro. LZ, streptozotocin-injected LZ (STZ, type 1 diabetic), and ZDF rats underwent carotid artery balloon injury (±10 mg PROLI/NO), and vessels were harvested at 3 and 14 d. UbcH10 was assessed by Western blotting and immunofluorescent staining.NO more effectively reduced UbcH10 levels in LZ versus ZDF VSMCs; however, addition of insulin and glucose dramatically potentiated the inhibitory effect of NO on UbcH10 in ZDF VSMCs. Three days after balloon injury, Western blotting showed NO decreased free UbcH10 and increased polyubiquitinated UbcH10 levels by 35% in both STZ and ZDF animals. Fourteen days after injury, immunofluorescent staining showed increased UbcH10 levels throughout the arterial wall in all animal models. NO decreased UbcH10 levels in LZ and STZ rats but not in ZDF.These data suggest a disconnect between UbcH10 levels and neointimal hyperplasia formation in type 2 diabetic models and contribute valuable insight regarding differential efficacy of NO in these models.Published by Elsevier Inc.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Functional consequence of the MET-T1010I polymorphism in breast cancer.

2015-02-20

[Oncotarget 6(5) , 2604-14, (2015)]

Immunomodulation by the Pseudomonas syringae HopZ type III effector family in Arabidopsis.

2014-01-01

[PLoS ONE 9(12) , e116152, (2014)]

Targeting glucose uptake with siRNA-based nanomedicine for cancer therapy.

2015-05-01

[Biomaterials 51 , 1-11, (2015)]

Melatonin-mediated Bim up-regulation and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) down-regulation enhances tunicamycin-induced apoptosis in MDA-MB-231 cells.

2015-04-01

[J. Pineal Res. 58(3) , 310-20, (2015)]

25-O-acetyl-23,24-dihydro-cucurbitacin F induces cell cycle G2/M arrest and apoptosis in human soft tissue sarcoma cells.

2015-04-22

[J. Ethnopharmacol. 164 , 265-72, (2015)]

More Articles...