Abstract
We sought to investigate the effects of diabetes and hyaluronidase on the thickness of the endothelial glycocalyx layer in the mouse retina. In our study, the retinal circulation of diabetic Ins2(Akita) mice and their nondiabetic littermates were observed via intravital microscopy. The endothelial glycocalyx thickness was determined from the infusion of two fluorescently labeled plasma markers, one of which was a high molecular weight rhodamine dextran (MW = 155,000) excluded from the glycocalyx, and the other a more permeable low molecular weight sodium fluorescein (MW = 376). In nondiabetic C57BL/6 mice, the glycocalyx thickness also was evaluated prior to and following infusion of hyaluronidase, an enzyme that can degrade hyaluronic acid on the endothelial surface. A leakage index was used to evaluate the influence of hyaluronidase on the transport of the fluorescent tracers from the plasma into the surrounding tissue, and plasma samples were obtained to measure levels of circulating hyaluronic acid. Both diabetes and hyaluronidase infusion significantly reduced the thickness of the glycocalyx in retinal arterioles (but not in venules), and hyaluronidase increased retinal microvascular leakage of both fluorescent tracers into the surrounding tissue. However, only hyaluronidase infusion (not diabetes) increased circulating plasma levels of hyaluronic acid. In summary, our findings demonstrate that diabetes and hyaluronidase reduce the thickness of the retinal endothelial glycocalyx, in which hyaluronic acid may play a significant role in barrier function.
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