Article

Angiogenic peptides improve blood flow and promote capillary growth in a diabetic and ischaemic mouse model.

Felsenstein Medical Research Center, Tel-Aviv University Sackler School of Medicine, Rabin Medical Center, Beilinson Campus, Petah Tikva 49100, Israel.
European journal of vascular and endovascular surgery: the official journal of the European Society for Vascular Surgery (impact factor: 2.92). 03/2010; 40(3):381-8. DOI:10.1016/j.ejvs.2010.02.003
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT It is a common clinical observation that collateral vessel development is impaired in diabetic patients with ischaemic vascular diseases. Consequently, alternative revascularisation strategies in diabetic patients are needed. This study presents the effect and mechanism of new peptide therapeutic angiogenesis in an ischaemic and diabetic mouse model.
Streptozocin-injected mice that had undergone hind-limb ischaemia were treated with angiogenic peptides. Blood flow restoration was calculated by laser Doppler imager and corroborated by histological section. For the mechanism study, endothelial cells were exposed to hypoxia and high glucose concentrations to study the effect of the peptides on proliferation and anti-apoptosis.
The peptides significantly restored blood perfusion 21 days after surgery in the diabetic mice (p < 0.01) by neo-vascularisation, corroborated by an increase in capillary density. In addition, the peptides induced the proliferation of hypoxic endothelial cells (p < 0.01) and protected the cells from apoptosis in high glucose cultures.
This is the first approach for treatment of ischaemic vascular disease with peptides in a diabetic mouse model.

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Keywords

alternative revascularisation strategies
 
Blood flow restoration
 
blood perfusion 21 days
 
collateral vessel development
 
common clinical observation
 
diabetic mice
 
diabetic mouse model
 
endothelial cells
 
first approach
 
glucose concentrations
 
glucose cultures
 
histological section
 
hypoxic endothelial cells
 
ischaemic vascular disease
 
ischaemic vascular diseases
 
neo-vascularisation
 
new peptide therapeutic angiogenesis
 
peptides induced
 
Streptozocin-injected mice
 
study presents