AI Article Synopsis

  • Restenosis after procedures to open blocked arteries is particularly problematic for people with insulin resistance and diabetes, and the effects of insulin on blood vessels are not fully understood.
  • Insulin seems to help endothelial cells but can promote growth in vascular smooth muscle cells; previous research showed that insulin can reduce neointimal growth (the thickening of vessel walls) when the body responds well to insulin, but this effect disappears in insulin-resistant states.
  • In experiments with mice, insulin only reduced neointimal growth in healthy insulin-sensitive scenarios, whereas in insulin-resistant situations, insulin had no impact on smooth muscle cells, indicating that specific insulin receptors on these cells are crucial for insulin's protective effects against restenosis.

Article Abstract

Restenosis following percutaneous revascularization is a major challenge in patients with insulin resistance and diabetes. Currently, the vascular effects of insulin are not fully understood. In vitro, insulin's effects on endothelial cells (ECs) are beneficial, whereas on vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs), they are mitogenic. We previously demonstrated a suppressive effect of insulin on neointimal growth under insulin-sensitive conditions that was abolished in insulin-resistant conditions. Here, we aimed to determine the cell-specific effects of insulin on neointimal growth in a model of restenosis under insulin-sensitive and insulin-resistant conditions. Vascular cell-specific insulin receptor (IR)-deficient mice were fed a low-fat diet (LFD) or a high-fat, high-sucrose diet (HFSD) and implanted with an insulin pellet or vehicle prior to femoral artery wire injury. In insulin-sensitive conditions, insulin decreased neointimal growth only in controls. However, under insulin-resistant conditions, insulin had no effect in either control, EC-specific or SMC-specific IR-deficient mice. These data demonstrate that EC and SMC IRs are required for the anti-restenotic effect of insulin in insulin-sensitive conditions and that, in insulin resistance, insulin has no adverse effect on vascular SMCs in vivo.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11352246PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells13161387DOI Listing

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