4.7 Article

High glucose and endothelial cell growth:: novel effects independent of autocrine TGF-β1 and hyperosmolarity

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 284, Issue 6, Pages C1374-C1386

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00466.2002

Keywords

endothelial cells; diabetes mellitus; apoptosis; endoreduplication; transforming growth factor-beta 1

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Human endothelial cells were exposed to 5 mM glucose ( control), 25 mM ( high) glucose, or osmotic control for 72 h. TGF-beta1 production, cell growth, death, and cell cycle progression, and the effects of TGF-beta1 and TGF-beta neutralization on these parameters were studied. High glucose and hyperosmolarity increased endothelial TGF-beta1 secretion (P < 0.0001) and bioactivity (P < 0.0001). However, high glucose had a greater effect on reducing endothelial cell number ( P < 0.001) and increasing cellular protein content (P < 0.001) than the osmotic control. TGF-beta antibody only reversed the antiproliferative and hypertrophic effects of high glucose. High glucose altered cell cycle progression and cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor expression independently of hyperosmolarity. High glucose increased endothelial cell apoptosis ( P < 0.01), whereas hyperosmolarity induced endothelial cell necrosis ( P < 0.001). TGF-beta antibody did not reverse the apoptotic effects observed with high glucose. Exogenous TGF-beta1 mimicked the increased S phase delay but not endoreduplication observed with high glucose. High glucose altered endothelial cell growth, apoptosis, and cell cycle progression. These growth effects occurred principally via a TGF-beta1 autocrine pathway. In contrast, apoptosis and endoreduplication occurred independently of this cytokine and hyperosmolarity.

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