Studies of Rat and Human Retinas Predict a Role for the Polyol Pathway in Human Diabetic Retinopathy
- 1 September 2004
- journal article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes
- Vol. 53 (9) , 2404-2411
- https://doi.org/10.2337/diabetes.53.9.2404
Abstract
The polyol (sorbitol) pathway of glucose metabolism is activated in many cell types when intracellular glucose concentrations are high, and it can generate cellular stress through several mechanisms. The role of the polyol pathway in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy has remained uncertain, in part because it has been examined preferentially in galactose-induced retinopathy and in part because inhibition studies may not have achieved full blockade of the pathway. Having observed that the streptozotocin-induced diabetic rat accurately models many cellular processes characteristic of human diabetic retinopathy, we tested in the diabetic rat if documented inhibition of the polyol pathway prevents a sequence of retinal vascular abnormalities also present in human diabetes. An inhibitor of aldose reductase, the rate-limiting enzyme in the pathway, prevented the early activation of complement in the wall of retinal vessels and the decreased levels of complement inhibitors in diabetic rats, as well as the later apoptosis of vascular pericytes and endothelial cells and the development of acellular capillaries. Both rat and human retinal endothelial cells showed aldose reductase immunoreactivity, and human retinas exposed to high glucose in organ culture increased the production of sorbitol by a degree similar to that observed in the rat. Excess aldose reductase activity can be a mechanism for human diabetic retinopathy.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bax Is Increased in the Retina of Diabetic Subjects and Is Associated with Pericyte Apoptosis in Vivo and in VitroThe American Journal of Pathology, 2000
- Tissue distribution of the rat analogue of decay‐accelerating factorImmunology, 1999
- Aldose reductase functions as a detoxification system for lipid peroxidation products in vasculitisJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1999
- The biology of PECAM-1.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1997
- Comparison of retinal lesions in alloxan-diabetic rats and galactose-fed ratsCurrent Eye Research, 1994
- Aldose reductase inhibition fails to prevent retinopathy in diabetic and galactosemic dogsDiabetes, 1993
- Activation of aldose reductase from human tissuesDiabetes, 1985
- Localization of aldose reductase in the human eyeDiabetes, 1984
- Red cell sorbitol: an indicator of diabetic controlDiabetes, 1980
- Immunohistochemical localization of aldose reductase. II. Rat eye and kidneyDiabetes, 1980