| Literature DB >> 33239449 |
Jessy Chen1,2, Thomas Fleming3, Sylvia Katz1,2, Matthias Dewenter1,2, Kai Hofmann1,2, Alireza Saadatmand1,2, Mariya Kronlage1,2,4, Moritz P Werner1,2, Bianca Pokrandt5, Friederike Schreiter1,2, Jihong Lin6, Daniel Katz1,2, Jakob Morgenstern3, Ahmed Elwakiel7, Peter Sinn8, Hermann-Josef Gröne9,10, Hans-Peter Hammes6, Peter P Nawroth3,11,12,13, Berend Isermann7, Carsten Sticht14, Britta Brügger5, Hugo A Katus2,4, Marco Hagenmueller1,2, Johannes Backs15,2.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes has become a pandemic and leads to late diabetic complications of organs, including kidney and eye. Lowering hyperglycemia is the typical therapeutic goal in clinical medicine. However, hyperglycemia may only be a symptom of diabetes but not the sole cause of late diabetic complications; instead, other diabetes-related alterations could be causative. Here, we studied the role of CaM kinase II-δ (CaMKIIδ), which is known to be activated through diabetic metabolism. CaMKIIδ is expressed ubiquitously and might therefore affect several different organ systems. We crossed diabetic leptin receptor-mutant mice to mice lacking CaMKIIδ globally. Remarkably, CaMKIIδ-deficient diabetic mice did not develop hyperglycemia. As potential underlying mechanisms, we provide evidence for improved insulin sensing with increased glucose transport into skeletal muscle and also reduced hepatic glucose production. Despite normoglycemia, CaMKIIδ-deficient diabetic mice developed the full picture of diabetic nephropathy, but diabetic retinopathy was prevented. We also unmasked a retina-specific gene expression signature that might contribute to CaMKII-dependent retinal diabetic complications. These data challenge the clinical concept of normalizing hyperglycemia in diabetes as a causative treatment strategy for late diabetic complications and call for a more detailed analysis of intracellular metabolic signals in different diabetic organs.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33239449 DOI: 10.2337/db19-0659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461