We investigated mechanisms underlying progressive axonal dysfunction and structural deficits in type 1 BB/Wor-rats from 1 week to 10 month diabetes duration. Motor and sensory conduction velocities were decreased after 4 and 6 weeks of diabetes and declined further over the remaining 9 months. Myelinated sural nerve fibers showed progressive deficits in fiber numbers and sizes. Structural deficits in unmyelinated axonal size were evident at 2 month and deficits in number were present at 4 mo. These changes were preceded by decreased availability of insulin, C-peptide and IGF-1 and decreased expression of neurofilaments and beta-III-tubulin. Upregulation of phosphorylating stress kinases like Cdk5, p-GSK-3beta, and p42/44 resulted in increased phosphorylation of neurofilaments. Increasing activity of p-GSK-3beta correlated with increasing phosphorylation of NFH, whereas decreasing Cdk5 correlated with diminishing phosphorylation of NFM. The data suggest that impaired neurotrophic support results in sequentially impaired synthesis and postranslational modifications of neuroskeletal proteins, resulting in progressive deficits in axonal function, maturation and size.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2761046PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2009/793281DOI Listing

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