volume 55 issue 7 pages 1961-1969

Increased Dicarbonyl Metabolism in Endothelial Cells in Hyperglycemia Induces Anoikis and Impairs Angiogenesis by RGD and GFOGER Motif Modification

Darin Dobler 1
Naila AHMED 1
Lijiang Song 1
Kevin E Eboigbodin 1
Paul J. Thornalley 1
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2006-07-01
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR2.355
CiteScore11.0
Impact factor7.5
ISSN00121797, 23724765, 1939327X
PubMed ID:  16804064
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Internal Medicine
Abstract

Chronic vascular disease in diabetes is associated with disruption of extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions with adherent endothelial cells, compromising cell survival and impairing vasculature structure. Loss of functional contact with integrins activates anoikis and impairs angiogenesis. The metabolic dysfunction underlying this vascular damage and disruption is unclear. Here, we show that increased modification of vascular basement membrane type IV collagen by methylglyoxal, a dicarbonyl glycating agent with increased formation in hyperglycemia, formed arginine-derived hydroimidazolone residues at hotspot modification sites in RGD and GFOGER integrin-binding sites of collagen, causing endothelial cell detachment, anoikis, and inhibition of angiogenesis. Endothelial cells incubated in model hyperglycemia in vitro and experimental diabetes in vivo produced the same modifications of vascular collagen, inducing similar responses. Pharmacological scavenging of methylglyoxal prevented anoikis and maintained angiogenesis, and inhibition of methylglyoxal metabolism with a cell permeable glyoxalase I inhibitor provoked these responses in normoglycemia. Thus, increased formation of methylglyoxal and ECM glycation in hyperglycemia impairs endothelial cell survival and angiogenesis and likely contributes to similar vascular dysfunction in diabetes.

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GOST Copy
Dobler D. et al. Increased Dicarbonyl Metabolism in Endothelial Cells in Hyperglycemia Induces Anoikis and Impairs Angiogenesis by RGD and GFOGER Motif Modification // Diabetes. 2006. Vol. 55. No. 7. pp. 1961-1969.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Dobler D., AHMED N., Song L., Eboigbodin K. E., Thornalley P. Increased Dicarbonyl Metabolism in Endothelial Cells in Hyperglycemia Induces Anoikis and Impairs Angiogenesis by RGD and GFOGER Motif Modification // Diabetes. 2006. Vol. 55. No. 7. pp. 1961-1969.
RIS |
Cite this
RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.2337/db05-1634
UR - https://doi.org/10.2337/db05-1634
TI - Increased Dicarbonyl Metabolism in Endothelial Cells in Hyperglycemia Induces Anoikis and Impairs Angiogenesis by RGD and GFOGER Motif Modification
T2 - Diabetes
AU - Dobler, Darin
AU - AHMED, Naila
AU - Song, Lijiang
AU - Eboigbodin, Kevin E
AU - Thornalley, Paul J.
PY - 2006
DA - 2006/07/01
PB - American Diabetes Association
SP - 1961-1969
IS - 7
VL - 55
PMID - 16804064
SN - 0012-1797
SN - 2372-4765
SN - 1939-327X
ER -
BibTex |
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2006_Dobler,
author = {Darin Dobler and Naila AHMED and Lijiang Song and Kevin E Eboigbodin and Paul J. Thornalley},
title = {Increased Dicarbonyl Metabolism in Endothelial Cells in Hyperglycemia Induces Anoikis and Impairs Angiogenesis by RGD and GFOGER Motif Modification},
journal = {Diabetes},
year = {2006},
volume = {55},
publisher = {American Diabetes Association},
month = {jul},
url = {https://doi.org/10.2337/db05-1634},
number = {7},
pages = {1961--1969},
doi = {10.2337/db05-1634}
}
MLA
Cite this
MLA Copy
Dobler, Darin, et al. “Increased Dicarbonyl Metabolism in Endothelial Cells in Hyperglycemia Induces Anoikis and Impairs Angiogenesis by RGD and GFOGER Motif Modification.” Diabetes, vol. 55, no. 7, Jul. 2006, pp. 1961-1969. https://doi.org/10.2337/db05-1634.