| Literature DB >> 26300887 |
Melita Vidaković1, Nevena Grdović1, Svetlana Dinić1, Mirjana Mihailović1, Aleksandra Uskoković1, Jelena Arambašić Jovanović1.
Abstract
The pleiotropic chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand 12 (CXCL12) has emerged as a crucial player in several diseases. The role of CXCL12 in diabetes promotion and progression remains elusive due to its multiple functions and the overwhelming complexity of diabetes. Diabetes is a metabolic disorder resulting from a failure in glucose regulation due to β-cell loss and/or dysfunction. In view of its ability to stimulate the regeneration, proliferation, and survival of β-cells, as well as its capacity to sustain local immune-isolation, CXCL12 has been considered in approaches aimed at attenuating type 1 diabetes. However, a note of caution emerges from examinations of the involvement of CXCL12 in the development of diabetes and its complications, as research data indicate that CXCL12 displays effects that range from protective to detrimental. Therefore, as a beneficial effect of CXCL12 in one process could have deleterious consequences in another, a more complete understanding of CXCL12 effects, in particular its functioning in the cellular microenvironment, is essential before CXCL12 can be considered in therapies for diabetes treatment.Entities:
Keywords: CXCL12; CXCR4; CXCR7; diabetes mellitus; diabetic complications; pancreatic β-cells
Year: 2015 PMID: 26300887 PMCID: PMC4528295 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Proposed mechanism of the CXCL12/Akt-mediated anti-necrotic effect that leads to pancreatic . Under basal conditions, interaction between activated Akt (pAkt) and PARP-1 leads to PARP-1 phosphorylation that results in partial inhibition of PARP-1 in wild type (wt) and CXCL12 overexpressing Rin-5F cells. After hydrogen peroxide-induced oxidative stress and in response to severe DNA damage in wt cells, the loss of pAkt-PARP-1 interaction allows PARP-1 hyperactivation, followed by extensive PARP-1 auto-poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation, NAD+ and ATP depletion, and final necrotic cell death. In CXCL12 overexpressing cells, pAkt-PARP-1 interaction persists after hydrogen peroxide treatment, maintaining partial inhibition of PARP-1. Consequently, cellular energy depletion is prevented and a switch from the necrotic to the apoptotic cell death is ensured. With CXCL12-mediated suppression of PARP-1 overactivation in stress conditions, cell still operates with the active PARP-1 that is essential player in many cellular processes. The mechanism is based on the findings presented in Ref. (41).
Yin-Yang nature of CXCL12 in diabetic complications.
| Effects of activated CXCL12/CXCR4 axis (in a mouse model system) | Role of the CXCL12/CXCR4 axis in diabetes | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Accelerates wound healing in diabetes, improves angiogenesis | ( | |
| Promotes diabetic retinopathy, contributes to angiogenesis via recruitment of EPCs to the site of vascular injury | ( | |
| Improves diabetes progression in NOD mice by sequestering Tregs in the bone marrow, which disturbs the balance in favor of autoreactive T cells | ( | |
| Prevents insulitis and autoimmune diabetes via recruitment of Th2-type cells to the pancreas of NOD mice | ( | |
| Mediates kidney repair by homing of progenitor cells to the injured kidney in acute renal failure | ( | |
| Contributes to progression of diabetic nephropathy through involvement in glomerulosclerosis, podocyte loss and albuminuria | ( | |
| Induces M1 macrophage accumulation in adipose tissue which leads to secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines in obesity, associated with insulin resistance | ( |
Balanced (.