| Literature DB >> 27338619 |
Jinit Masania1, Malgorzata Malczewska-Malec2, Urszula Razny2, Joanna Goralska2, Anna Zdzienicka2, Beata Kiec-Wilk2, Anna Gruca2, Julita Stancel-Mozwillo2, Aldona Dembinska-Kiec2, Naila Rabbani3, Paul J Thornalley4,5.
Abstract
The glyoxalase system in the cytoplasm of cells provides the primary defence against glycation by methylglyoxal catalysing its metabolism to D-lactate. Methylglyoxal is the precursor of the major quantitative advanced glycation endproducts in physiological systems - arginine-derived hydroimidazolones and deoxyguanosine-derived imidazopurinones. Glyoxalase 1 of the glyoxalase system was linked to anthropometric measurements of obesity in human subjects and to body weight in strains of mice. Recent conference reports described increased weight gain on high fat diet-fed mouse with lifelong deficiency of glyoxalase 1 deficiency, compared to wild-type controls, and decreased weight gain in glyoxalase 1-overexpressing transgenic mice, suggesting a functional role of glyoxalase 1 and dicarbonyl stress in obesity. Increased methylglyoxal, dicarbonyl stress, in white adipose tissue and liver may be a mediator of obesity and insulin resistance and thereby a risk factor for development of type 2 diabetes and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Increased methylglyoxal formation from glyceroneogenesis on adipose tissue and liver and decreased glyoxalase 1 activity in obesity likely drives dicarbonyl stress in white adipose tissue increasing the dicarbonyl proteome and related dysfunction. The clinical significance will likely emerge from on-going clinical evaluation of inducers of glyoxalase 1 expression in overweight and obese subjects. Increased transcapillary escape rate of albumin and increased total body interstitial fluid volume in obesity likely makes levels of glycation of plasma protein unreliable indicators of glycation status in obesity as there is a shift of albumin dwell time from plasma to interstitial fluid, which decreases overall glycation for a given glycemic exposure.Entities:
Keywords: Glycation; Glyceroneogenesis; Glyoxalase; Hypoxia; Inflammation, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease; Insulin resistance; Methylglyoxal; Obesity
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Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27338619 PMCID: PMC4975769 DOI: 10.1007/s10719-016-9692-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glycoconj J ISSN: 0282-0080 Impact factor: 2.916
Fig. 1Biochemistry of dicarbonyl stress. a Metabolism of MG by the glyoxalase system. b Formation of hydroimidazolone MG-H1 from arginine residues. c Formation of imidazopurinone MGdG in DNA. Adduct residue is shown with guanyl base only
Subject characteristics
| Variable | Non-obese | Obese |
|---|---|---|
| N | 18 | 29 |
| Age (years) | 50 ± 10 | 48 ± 11 |
| Gender (M/F) | 3/15 | 7/22 |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 27.8 ± 1.3 | 34.3 ± 3.3*** |
| Systolic BP (mmHg) | 125 ± 10 | 133 ± 21 |
| Diastolic BP (mmHg) | 79 ± 10 | 86 ± 10* |
| Hypertension (Y/N) | 4/14 | 13/16 |
| Fasting plasma glucose (mM) | 5.1 ± 0.6 | 5.2 ± 0.6 |
| Plasma MG (nM) | 181 ± 61 | 245 ± 123* |
| Plasma protein MG-H1 (mmol/mol arg) | 0.266 ± 0.105 | 0.264 ± 0.087 |
| Plasma D-lactate (μM) | 6.5 (2.4–13.7) | 15.9 (10.0–20.2)* |
Data are mean ± SD or median (lower – upper quartile). Significance: * and ***, P < 0.05 and P < 0.001, respectively (t-test for parametric data or Mann-Whitney U test for non-parametric data). Healthy human subjects were recruited at the Department of Clinical Biochemistry, Jagiellonian University Medical College, Krakow, Poland, after written informed consent. Inclusion criteria were: age 25–65 years, BMI - > 30–40 kg/m2 (obese) or <30 kg/m2 (all except one were overweight). Exclusion criteria were any co-morbidity and any medication for dysglycaemia or dyslipidaemia. Subjects were placed on a diet of 2300–2400 kcal/day (isocaloric diet) for 2 weeks prior to blood sampling. Peripheral venous blood samples were collected using EDTA as anticoagulant. Blood cells were sedimented by centrifugation (2000 g, 10 min) and plasma removed and retained for analysis. The study was approved by Jagiellonian University Bioethical Committee (Ref. KBET/82/B/2009 of 25 June 2009). Plasma and red blood cells were stored at -80 °C until analysis. The experiments conformed to the principles set out in the WMA Declaration of Helsinki
Fig. 2Glycation of albumin by glucose – glycation kinetics and dynamics in vascular and extravascular compartments. Physiological data from [45, 46]. Relative glycation kinetics deduced from: rGlycation = k [Glucose][albumin], k is the glycation rate constant and assuming rGlycation in the plasma compartment =100 %
Fig. 3Increased formation of methylglyoxal in the triglyceride/free fatty acid cycle. Percentage flux of glyceroneogenesis in triglyceride formation in liver and adipose tissue is from [64]