4.7 Article

Bone marrow-derived TNF-α causes diabetic neuropathy in mice

Journal

DIABETOLOGIA
Volume 58, Issue 2, Pages 402-410

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00125-014-3440-4

Keywords

Apoptosis; Bone marrow; Cell fusion; Diabetic complications; Diabetic neuropathy; Dorsal root ganglia; Hyperglycaemia; Peripheral nervous system; Proinsulin-producing bone marrow-derived cells; TNF-alpha

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [R01 HL051586] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIDDK NIH HHS [HL-51586/DK105527, P30 DK079638, P30 DK056338, P30DK-079638] Funding Source: Medline

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Dysregulation of biochemical pathways in response to hyperglycaemia in cells intrinsic to the nervous system (Schwann cells, neurons, vasa nervorum) are thought to underlie diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN). TNF-alpha is a known aetiological factor; Tnf-knockout mice are protected against DPN. We hypothesised that TNF-alpha produced by a small but specific bone marrow (BM) subpopulation marked by proinsulin production (proinsulin-producing BM-derived cells, PI-BMDCs) is essential for DPN development. We produced mice deficient in TNF-alpha, globally in BM and selectively in PI-BMDCs only, by gene targeting and BM transplantation, and induced diabetes by streptozotocin. Motor and sensory nerve conduction velocities were used to gauge nerve dysfunction. Immunocytochemistry, fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) and PCR analysis of dorsal root ganglia (DRG) were employed to monitor outcome. We found that loss of TNF-alpha in BM only protected mice from DPN. We developed a strategy to delete TNF-alpha specifically in PI-BMDCs, and found that PI-BMDC-specific loss of TNF-alpha protected against DPN as robustly as loss of total BM TNF-alpha. Selective loss of PI-BMDC-derived TNF-alpha downregulated TUNEL-positive DRG neurons. FISH revealed PI-BMDC-neuron fusion cells in the DRG in mice with DPN; fusion cells were undetectable in non-diabetic mice or diabetic mice that had lost TNF-alpha expression selectively in the PI-BMDC subpopulation. BMDC-specific TNF-alpha is essential for DPN development; its selective removal from a small PI-BMDC subpopulation protects against DPN. The pathogenicity of PI-BMDC-derived TNF-alpha may have important therapeutic implications.

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