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  • Article: Hypertension-induced peripheral neuropathy and the combined effects of hypertension and diabetes on nerve structure and function in rats.
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    ABSTRACT: Diabetic neuropathy includes damage to neurons, Schwann cells and blood vessels. Rodent models of diabetes do not adequately replicate all pathological features of diabetic neuropathy, particularly Schwann cell damage. We, therefore, tested the hypothesis that combining hypertension, a risk factor for neuropathy in diabetic patients, with insulin-deficient diabetes produces a more pertinent model of peripheral neuropathy. Behavioral, physiological and structural indices of neuropathy were measured for up to 6 months in spontaneously hypertensive and age-matched normotensive rats with or without concurrent streptozotocin-induced diabetes. Hypertensive rats developed nerve ischemia, thermal hyperalgesia, nerve conduction slowing and axonal atrophy. Thinly myelinated fibers with supernumerary Schwann cells indicative of cycles of demyelination and remyelination were also identified along with reduced nerve levels of myelin basic protein. Similar disorders were noted in streptozotocin-diabetic rats, except that thinly myelinated fibers were not observed and expression of myelin basic protein was normal. Superimposing diabetes on hypertension compounded disorders of nerve blood flow, conduction slowing and axonal atrophy and increased the incidence of thinly myelinated fibers. Rats with combined insulinopenia, hyperglycemia and hypertension provide a model for diabetic neuropathy that offers an opportunity to study mechanisms of Schwann cell pathology and suggests that hypertension may contribute to the etiology of diabetic neuropathy.
    Acta Neuropathologica 07/2012; 124(4):561-73. · 9.32 Impact Factor
  • Article: Similar pattern of peripheral neuropathy in mouse models of type 1 diabetes and Alzheimer's disease.
    C G Jolivalt, N A Calcutt, E Masliah
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    ABSTRACT: There is an increasing awareness that diabetes has an impact on the CNS and that diabetes is a risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Links between AD and diabetes point to impaired insulin signaling as a common mechanism leading to defects in the brain. However, diabetes is predominantly characterized by peripheral, rather than central, neuropathy, and despite the common central mechanisms linking AD and diabetes, little is known about the effect of AD on the peripheral nervous system (PNS). In this study, we compared indexes of peripheral neuropathy and investigated insulin signaling in the sciatic nerve of insulin-deficient mice and amyloid precursor protein (APP) overexpressing transgenic mice. Insulin-deficient and APP transgenic mice displayed similar patterns of peripheral neuropathy with decreased motor nerve conduction velocity, thermal hypoalgesia, and loss of tactile sensitivity. Phosphorylation of the insulin receptor and glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β) was similarly affected in insulin-deficient and APP transgenic mice despite significantly different blood glucose and plasma insulin levels, and nerve of both models showed accumulation of Aβ-immunoreactive protein. Although diabetes and AD have different primary etiologies, both diseases share many abnormalities in both the brain and the PNS. Our data point to common deficits in the insulin-signaling pathway in both neurodegenerative diseases and support the idea that AD may cause disorders outside the higher CNS.
    Neuroscience 12/2011; 202:405-12. · 3.38 Impact Factor
  • Article: GLP-1 signals via ERK in peripheral nerve and prevents nerve dysfunction in diabetic mice.
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    ABSTRACT: Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) is an incretin hormone that induces glucose-dependent insulin secretion and may have neurotrophic properties. Our aim was to identify the presence and activity of GLP-1 receptors (GLP-1Rs) in peripheral nerve and to assess the impact of GLP-1R agonists on diabetes-induced nerve disorders. Tissues were collected from streptozotocin-diabetic rats. GLP-1R function was assessed by incubating tissues from normal and diabetic rats with GLP-1R agonists and antagonists and measuring induction of ERK1/2 phosphorylation by Western blot. Streptozotocin-diabetic mice were also treated with the GLP-1R agonist exenatide for 8 weeks to assess the impact of GLP-1R signalling on peripheral nerve function and structure. GLP-1R protein was detected in rat dorsal root ganglia and the neurons and Schwann cells of the sciatic nerve. Protein levels were not affected by streptozotocin-induced diabetes. GLP-1R agonists did not signal via ERK1/2 in sciatic nerve of normal rats. However, GLP-1R agonists significantly increased pERK1/2 levels in sciatic nerves from diabetic rats, indicating that GLP-1Rs are functional in this tissue. Exenatide treatment did not affect blood sugar, insulin levels or paw thermal response latencies in either control or diabetic mice. However, the reductions of motor nerve conduction velocity and paw intraepidermal fibre density seen in diabetic mice were attenuated by exenatide treatment. These data show that the peripheral nerve of diabetic rodents exhibits functional GLP-1R and suggest that GLP-1R-mediated ERK-signalling in sciatic nerve of diabetic rodents may protect large motor fibre function and small C fibre structure by a mechanism independent of glycaemic control.
    Diabetes Obesity and Metabolism 06/2011; 13(11):990-1000. · 3.38 Impact Factor
  • Article: A spinal mechanism of action for duloxetine in a rat model of painful diabetic neuropathy.
    T Mixcoatl-Zecuatl, C G Jolivalt
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    ABSTRACT: This study was designed to clarify mechanisms responsible for the anti-allodynic effects of duloxetine in diabetes. The streptozotocin-induced diabetic rat model was used to compare the efficacy of duloxetine, 5-HT, the 5-HT(2A) receptor agonist [1-(2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodophenyl)-2-aminopropane hydrochloride (DOI)] and two antagonists (ketanserin and pruvanserin) on tactile allodynia. Systemic or intrathecal injection of duloxetine alleviated tactile allodynia in diabetic rats. The effect of systemic duloxetine was reduced by intrathecal administration of ketanserin or pruvanserin, indicating participation of spinal 5-HT(2A) receptors in the mechanism of action of duloxetine. In contrast to spinal delivery, systemic and local peripheral injections of ketanserin or pruvanserin alleviated tactile allodynia in diabetic rats. This effect was reversed immediately after systemic or local DOI injection. These results support the involvement of spinal 5-HT(2A) receptors in the ability of duloxetine to ameliorate painful diabetic neuropathy. Our data also suggest that the role of 5-HT(2A) receptors depends on the level of the neuraxis at which activation takes place, with peripheral activation contributing to tactile allodynia in diabetic rats, whereas spinal activation of this receptor alleviates tactile allodynia. The development of selective peripheral 5-HT(2A) receptor antagonists may offer a novel approach for the treatment of diabetic neuropathic pain.
    British Journal of Pharmacology 03/2011; 164(1):159-69. · 4.41 Impact Factor
  • Article: Diabetes induces changes in ILK, PINCH and components of related pathways in the spinal cord of rats.
    Y Jiang, A P Mizisin, A Rearden, C G Jolivalt
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    ABSTRACT: Recent work suggests that diabetes affects processing of peripheral, spinal and supraspinal signals in the spinal cord. However, there is little evidence for spinal cord lesions that would account for alterations in behavioral responses induced by experimental diabetes. Therefore, we assessed the expression of proteins that might affect neuronal cytoskeletal stability and thus promote dendritic and synaptic reorganization in diabetic rats. Expression of ILK, PINCH, PI3K, GSK-3beta, tau, MAP2, synaptophysin and drebrin in the lumbar spinal cord of non-diabetic and streptozotocin-diabetic rats was assessed by Western-blot analysis and immunocytochemistry after 8 and 20weeks of diabetes. The impact of diabetes on the proteins studied was duration-dependent with changes observed after 20 but not 8weeks of diabetes. ILK and PINCH proteins levels were significantly decreased and both colocalized to neurons and oligodendrocytes. PI3K protein levels were also significantly decreased, while GSK-3beta activity tended to be increased. Phosphorylation of tau and MAP2A/B protein expression were significantly increased, and expression of synaptophysin and drebrin were reduced in diabetic rats. Decreased ILK and PINCH as well as alterations of components of related signaling pathways are associated with tau hyperphosphorylation, MAP2 overexpression and reduction of synaptic proteins in the spinal cord of diabetic rats, suggesting that ILK and PINCH contribute to stabilization of axonal and dendritic structures. However, these changes are not likely the cause of altered behavioral responses in diabetic rats that occur after short-term diabetes, but may contribute to structural changes occurring in long-term diabetes.
    Brain research 03/2010; 1332:100-9. · 2.46 Impact Factor

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