Abstract

Since the mechanism of human diabetic peripheral neuropathy and vascular disease in type 1 diabetes mellitus remains unknown, we assessed whether sympathetic transmitter overflow is altered by this disease and associated to vascular dysfunction. Diabetes was induced by streptozotocin (STZ)-treatment and compared to vehicle-treated rats. Aliquots of the ex vivo perfused rat arterial mesenteric preparation, denuded of the endothelial layer, were collected to quantify analytically sympathetic nerve co-transmitters overflow secreted by the isolated mesenteries of both groups of rats. Noradrenaline (NA), neuropeptide tyrosine (NPY), and ATP/metabolites were detected before, during, and after electrical field stimulation (EFS, 20 Hz) of the nerve terminals surrounding the mesenteric artery. NA overflow was comparable in both groups; however, basal or EFS-secreted ir-NPY was 26% reduced (p < 0.05) in diabetics. Basal and EFS-evoked ATP and adenosine (ADO) overflow to the arterial mesentery perfusate increased twofold and was longer lasting in diabetics; purine tissue content was 37.8% increased (p < 0.05) in the mesenteries from STZ-treated group of rats. Perfusion of the arterial mesentery vascular territory with 100 μM ATP, 100 nM 2-MeSADP, or 1 μM UTP elicited vasodilator responses of the same magnitude in controls or diabetics, but the increase in luminally accessible NO was 60–70% lower in diabetics (p < 0.05). Moreover, the concentration–response curve elicited by two NO donors was displaced downwards (p < 0.01) in diabetic rats. Parallel studies using primary cultures of endothelial cells from the arterial mesentery vasculature revealed that mechanical stimulation induced a rise in extracellular nucleotides, which in the cells from diabetic rats was larger and longer-lasting when comparing the extracellular release of ATP and ADO values to those of vehicle-treated controls. A 5 min challenge with purinergic agonists elicited a cell media NO rise, which was reduced in the endothelial cells from diabetic rats. Present findings provide neurochemical support for the diabetes-induced neuropathy and show that mesenteric endothelial cells alterations in response to mechanical stimulation are compatible with the endothelial dysfunction related to vascular disease progress.

Highlights

  • Diabetes mellitus is the most common endocrine disorder; predictions of the world health organization statistics indicate that 9% of the human population over 18 years will develop the disease (WHO, 2014)

  • Since at present there is no clear understanding of the mechanism involved in diabetesinduced neurovascular effector junction alterations, we describe the effects of diabetes type 1 on the sympathetic innervation of the rat arterial mesenteric bed and its implications in the vascular manifestations of the disease’s symptoms

  • electrical field stimulation (EFS) evoked a rise in the overflow of NA, ir-neuropeptide tyrosine (NPY), and Adenosine -triphosphate disodium salt hydrate (ATP)/metabolites to the rat mesentery artery perfusate that represents a fraction of the total sympathetic co-transmitter released in endothelium-denuded mesenteries

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Summary

Introduction

Diabetes mellitus is the most common endocrine disorder; predictions of the world health organization statistics indicate that 9% of the human population over 18 years will develop the disease (WHO, 2014). Based on the responses to electrical field stimulation (EFS), and to the exogenous NA and ATP application to the mesenteric artery of STZ-treated rats, Ralevic et al (1995) inferred the existence of disease-induced pre-junctional impairment. These authors concluded that experimental diabetes modified the smooth muscle reactivity to sympathetic co-transmitters or to an undetermined endothelium-derived factor, which is likely either nitric oxide (NO) or hyperpolarizing factor. AGEs bind to one of its multiple cell surface receptors increasing ROS production which promotes endothelial cell (EC) dysfunction by several mechanisms (Funk et al, 2012)

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