Literature DB >> 21123956

Atorvastatin prevents ischemic limb loss in type 2 diabetes: role of p53.

Yasutsugu Morimoto1, Yasuko Kureishi Bando, Toshimasa Shigeta, Akio Monji, Toyoaki Murohara.   

Abstract

AIM: Diabetic peripheral artery disease (PAD) is prone to be aggressive and recent reports have demonstrated that p53 accumulation may be responsible for impaired wound healing in diabetes. Statins has been demonstrated to facilitate p53 degradation by activating its specific ubiquitin ligase, MDM2. The aim of this study was to determine whether atorvastatin (ATR) improves the outcome of diabetic PAD through MDM2-mediated reduction of p53.
METHODS: Male KK/Ay mice (9 weeks old) were treated with ATR (2 mg/kg/day p.o.) or vehicle for 2 weeks and subjected to ischemic hindlimb operation to generate a diabetic PAD model. Incidences of amputation and changes of p53/MDM2 signaling in each ischemic limb were assessed 2 weeks after the operation (at 13 weeks of age). Effects of ATR on the insulin resistance of age-matched (13-week-old) and unoperated KK/Ay mice were assessed by the glucose tolerance test, circulating adiponectin concentration, and changes in insulin signaling (IRS-1/Akt phosphorylation).
RESULTS: In intact KK/Ay, ATR treatment mitigated insulin resistance without affecting cholesterol levels. All diabetic PAD models exhibited autoamputation (100%); however, ATR treatment partially restored the limb loss (41.7%). The p53 expression level in the ischemic limb of ATR-treated KK/Ay was significantly decreased and MDM2 phosphorylation level was markedly increased in tandem with the activation of Akt. Hypoxia mimetic iron chelator deferroxamine promoted p53 accumulation in H9c2 myoblast cells by suppressing the Akt/MDM2 pathway, which was restored by ATR.
CONCLUSIONS: ATR was found to restore ischemic limb loss in diabetes by augmenting p53 degradation through direct activation of the Akt/MDM2 pathway in skeletal muscle.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21123956     DOI: 10.5551/jat.6437

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Atheroscler Thromb        ISSN: 1340-3478            Impact factor:   4.928


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