Abstract

We studied effect of high glucose levels on coronary artery endothelial cell proliferation and human colon cancer cell proliferation. To examine the long‐term effect of glucose exposure on cell growth, cells were cultured for 14 days in the absence or presence of 183 mg/dL D‐glucose addition in the culture medium. Short effect of elevated glucose levels was examined by addition of 183 mg/dL D‐glucose addition in the culture medium for just one hour per day followed by changing the culture to standard medium (5.5 mM D‐glucose) during the next 23‐hours period. Cell proliferation was estimated by 2,3‐Bis (2‐methoxy‐4‐nitro‐5‐sulfophenyl)‐2H‐tetrazolium‐5‐carbox‐anilide (XTT) assay and phosphor‐Erk western blot analysis. We found that coronary artery endothelial cell proliferation was significantly increased in the culture medium with the acute one‐hour addition of 183 mg/dL D‐glucose compared to the absence or chronic presence of 183 mg/dL D‐glucose addition in the culture medium. In contrast, colon cancer cell proliferation was significantly increased in the continuous presence of 183 mg/dL D‐glucose addition in the culture medium compared to the acute one‐hour addition of glucose. The extent of Erk2 phosphorylation paralleled with the relative changes in cellular proliferation in both cell types. Taken together, these results suggested that continuous or transient high level of glucose exposure differentially effects coronary artery endothelial and human colon cancer cell proliferation.

Highlights

  • Diabetes mellitus patients have higher risk for both malignant tumor development such as colon cancer and atherosclerosis leading to coronary artery disease [1, 2]

  • Hour post-challenge plasma glucose (1-h PG) in normal glucose tolerance (NGT) displayed arterial stiffness indicated by higher values of brachialankle pulse wave velocity [5]

  • These findings raised a question that a rapid elevation and subsequent decline of glucose levels can be a regulator for coronary artery endothelial cell proliferation and colon cancer cell proliferation as previously reported [4]

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Summary

Introduction

Diabetes mellitus patients have higher risk for both malignant tumor development such as colon cancer and atherosclerosis leading to coronary artery disease [1, 2]. Quantification of cell proliferation performed by XTT analyses demonstrated a statistically significant increase in proliferation when the cells were treated with 183 mg/dL D-glucose for 1 hour per day and without 183 mg/dL supplement during the rest of 23 hours compared to cells maintained in the absence or presence of 183 mg/dL D-glucose supplement (Fig.2B).

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