Travis W Hein1, Luke B Potts, Wenjuan Xu, Josh Z Yuen, Lih Kuo. 1. Department of Surgery, Scott & White Memorial Hospital, College of Medicine, Texas A&M Health Science Center, Temple, Texas 76504, USA. thein@tamu.edu
Abstract
PURPOSE: Although hyperglycemia is implicated in retinal vascular dysfunction associated with the development of diabetic retinopathy, the temporal influence of hyperglycemia on retinal arteriolar reactivity remains unclear. Development of a large animal model of diabetes relevant to the human retina for evaluation of vascular function is also lacking. Herein, we examined nitric oxide (NO)-mediated dilation and endothelin-1 (ET-1)-induced constriction in retinal arterioles at various time periods in a porcine model of type 1 diabetes. METHODS: Retinal arterioles were isolated from streptozocin-induced diabetic pigs (2, 6, and 12 weeks of hyperglycemia, 427 ± 23 mg/dL) and age-matched control pigs (73 ± 4 mg/dL), and then cannulated and pressurized for vasoreactivity study using videomicroscopic techniques. RESULTS: Retinal arterioles isolated from control and diabetic pigs developed comparable levels of myogenic tone. The endothelium-dependent NO-mediated vasodilations to bradykinin and stepwise increases in luminal flow were significantly reduced within 2 weeks of hyperglycemia. The inhibitory effect was comparable following 6 and 12 weeks of hyperglycemia. However, the endothelium-independent vasodilation to sodium nitroprusside was unaffected. Constriction of retinal arterioles to ET-1 was unaltered at all time periods of hyperglycemia. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings provide the first direct evidence for selective impairment of endothelium-dependent NO-mediated dilation of retinal arterioles within 2 weeks of hyperglycemia in a pig model of diabetes. By contrast, the ability of arteriolar smooth muscle to dilate to NO donor or contract to ET-1 was unaffected throughout the study period. This endothelial vasodilator dysfunction during early diabetes may contribute to development of retinopathy with chronic hyperglycemia.
PURPOSE: Although hyperglycemia is implicated in retinal vascular dysfunction associated with the development of diabetic retinopathy, the temporal influence of hyperglycemia on retinal arteriolar reactivity remains unclear. Development of a large animal model of diabetes relevant to the human retina for evaluation of vascular function is also lacking. Herein, we examined nitric oxide (NO)-mediated dilation and endothelin-1 (ET-1)-induced constriction in retinal arterioles at various time periods in a porcine model of type 1 diabetes. METHODS: Retinal arterioles were isolated from streptozocin-induced diabeticpigs (2, 6, and 12 weeks of hyperglycemia, 427 ± 23 mg/dL) and age-matched control pigs (73 ± 4 mg/dL), and then cannulated and pressurized for vasoreactivity study using videomicroscopic techniques. RESULTS: Retinal arterioles isolated from control and diabeticpigs developed comparable levels of myogenic tone. The endothelium-dependent NO-mediated vasodilations to bradykinin and stepwise increases in luminal flow were significantly reduced within 2 weeks of hyperglycemia. The inhibitory effect was comparable following 6 and 12 weeks of hyperglycemia. However, the endothelium-independent vasodilation to sodium nitroprusside was unaffected. Constriction of retinal arterioles to ET-1 was unaltered at all time periods of hyperglycemia. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings provide the first direct evidence for selective impairment of endothelium-dependent NO-mediated dilation of retinal arterioles within 2 weeks of hyperglycemia in a pig model of diabetes. By contrast, the ability of arteriolar smooth muscle to dilate to NO donor or contract to ET-1 was unaffected throughout the study period. This endothelial vasodilator dysfunction during early diabetes may contribute to development of retinopathy with chronic hyperglycemia.
Authors: K Polak; G Dorner; B Kiss; E Polska; O Findl; G Rainer; H G Eichler; L Schmetterer Journal: Br J Ophthalmol Date: 2000-11 Impact factor: 4.638
Authors: Wankun Xie; Min Zhao; Shu-Huai Tsai; William L Burkes; Luke B Potts; Wenjuan Xu; H Ross Payne; Travis W Hein; Lih Kuo; Robert H Rosa Journal: Exp Eye Res Date: 2018-08-16 Impact factor: 3.467