Human serum albumin nonenzymatically condenses with glucose to form stable Amadori adducts that are increased with the hyperglycemia of diabetes. The present study evaluated the influence of fatty acids, which are major endogenous ligands, on albumin glycation and of glycation on albumin conformation and exogenous ligand binding. Physiologic concentrations of palmitate, oleate, and linoleate reduced the ability of albumin to form glucose adducts, whereas glycation decreased intrinsic fluorescence, lowered the affinity for dansylsarcosine, and diminished the fatty acid-induced increase in limiting fluorescence of protein-bound warfarin that was observed with nonglycated albumin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlomerular cells in culture respond to albumin containing Amadori glucose adducts (the principal serum glycated protein), with activation of protein kinase C-beta(1), increased expression of transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta1, the TGF-beta type II signaling receptor, and the extracellular matrix proteins alpha(1)(IV) collagen and fibronectin and with decreased production of the podocyte protein nephrin. Decreasing the burden of glycated albumin in diabetic db/db mice significantly reduces glomerular overexpression of TGF-beta1 mRNA, restores glomerular nephrin immunofluorescence, and lessens proteinuria, mesangial expansion, renal extracellular matrix protein production, and increased glomerular vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) immunostaining. In the present study, db/db mice were treated with a small molecule, designated 23CPPA, that inhibits the nonenzymatic condensation of glucose with the albumin protein to evaluate whether increased glycated albumin influences the production of VEGF receptors (VEGFRs) and type IV collagen subchains and ameliorates the development of renal insufficiency.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Albumin modified by Amadori-glucose adducts has been linked to the development of diabetic nephropathy through its ability, independent of hyperglycemia, to activate protein kinase C-beta (PKC-beta), up-regulate the transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) system, and stimulate expression of extracellular matrix proteins in glomerular cells, and by the demonstration that reducing the burden of glycated albumin ameliorates renal structural and functional abnormalities in the db/db mouse.
Methods: To probe whether the salutary effects consequent to lowering glycated albumin, which include reduction of albuminuria, relate to an influence of the Amadori-modified protein on nephrin, the podocyte protein critical to regulation of protein excretion, and on the angiogenic vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), which induces microvascular permeability, diabetic db/db mice were treated with a small molecule that inhibits the nonenzymatic glycation of albumin.
Results: Compared to nondiabetic db/m mice, diabetic controls exhibited increased urinary excretion of albumin and type IV collagen, elevated renal TGF-beta1 protein levels, reduced glomerular nephrin immunofluorescence and nephrin protein by immunoblotting, and increased glomerular VEGF immunostaining and renal VEGF protein content.
Nonenzymatic glycation of apolipoprotein B in the low-density lipoprotein (LDL) complex has been considered a proatherogenic modification contributory to the increased susceptibility of patients with diabetes to atherosclerosis. We postulated that glycated LDL concentrations might be associated with other markers of cardiovascular disease. To explore this hypothesis, we measured glycated LDL concentrations by a monospecific immunoassay in 50 patients with type 1 and 100 patients with type 2 diabetes and examined relationships with the amount of albumin excretion and the serum cholesterol and triglyercide concentrations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Glycated albumin has been causally linked to the pathobiology of diabetic renal disease through its ability to stimulate the expression of transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1), activate protein kinase C (PKC) and extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), and promote production of extracellular matrix proteins in cultured glomerular cells. Whether glycated albumin modulates glomerular TGF-beta1 expression in vivo is not known. To address this issue, we assessed glomerular TGF-beta1 expression and pathology in response to reducing the burden of glycated albumin in vivo.
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