Diabetes downregulates GLUT1 expression in the retina and its microvessels but not in the cerebral cortex or its microvessels
Diabetes downregulates GLUT1 expression in the retina and its microvessels but not in the cerebral cortex or its microvessels. G A Badr , J Tang , F Ismail-Beigi and T S Kern Department of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA. Abstract Capillaries in the retina are more su...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Diabetes (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2000-06, Vol.49 (6), p.1016-1021 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Diabetes downregulates GLUT1 expression in the retina and its microvessels but not in the cerebral cortex or its microvessels.
G A Badr ,
J Tang ,
F Ismail-Beigi and
T S Kern
Department of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
Abstract
Capillaries in the retina are more susceptible to develop microvascular lesions in diabetes than capillaries in the embryologically
similar cerebral cortex. Because available evidence implicates hyperglycemia in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy,
differences in glucose transport into the retina and brain might contribute to this observed tissue difference in susceptibility
to diabetes-induced microvascular disease. Thus, we compared levels of GLUT1 and GLUT3 expression in the retina, cerebrum,
and their respective microvessels by Western blot analysis. In nondiabetic animals, the content of GLUT1 protein in retina
and its microvessels was multifold greater than that of cerebral cortex gray matter and its microvessels. Streptozotocin-induced
diabetes of a 2-week or 2-month duration reduced GLUT1 expression in the retina and its microvasculature by approximately
50%, but it resulted in no reduction in GLUT1 expression in cerebrum or its microvessels. The density of capillaries in retinas
of diabetic animals did not change from normal, and so the observed decrease in GLUT1 expression in the retina and retinal
capillaries of diabetic animals cannot be attributed to fewer vessels. Despite the diabetes-induced reduction of GLUT1 expression
in retina, neural retina of diabetic rats still possessed more GLUT1 than the cerebrum. Retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) possessed
more GLUT1 than neural retina or its microvessels, and expression of the transporter in the RPE was not affected by diabetes.
GLUT3 levels were greater in cerebral gray matter than in retina, and they were unaffected by diabetes in either tissue. The
effect of diabetes on GLUT1 expression differs between retina and cerebral cortex, suggesting that glucose transport is regulated
differently in these embryologically similar tissues. Because diabetes results in downregulation of GLUT1 expression in retinal
microvessels, but not in RPE, the fraction of the glucose entering the retina in diabetes is likely to be greater across the
RPE than across the retinal vasculature. |
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ISSN: | 0012-1797 1939-327X |
DOI: | 10.2337/diabetes.49.6.1016 |