| Literature DB >> 33545179 |
Ruonan Gao1, Lingjia Ren1, Yu Zhou2, Lijing Wang1, Yunzhen Xie2, Mengjun Zhang3, Xiaoying Liu1, Sujie Ke1, Kejun Wu1, Jiaping Zheng1, Xiaohong Liu1, Zhou Chen4, Libin Liu5.
Abstract
The present study aimed to determine the relationship between astrocytes and recurrent non-severe hypoglycemia (RH)2 -associated cognitive decline in diabetes. RH induced cognitive impairment and neuronal cell death in the cerebral cortex of diabetic mice, accompanied by excessive activation of astrocytes. Levels of the neurotrophins BDNF and GDNF, together with BDNF and GDNF- related signaling, were downregulated by RH. In vitro, recurrent low glucose (RLG)3 impaired cell viability and induced apoptosis of high-glucose cultured astrocytes. Accumulating mitochondrial ROS and dysregulated mitochondrial functions, including abnormal morphology, decreased membrane potential, downregulated ATP levels, and disrupted bioenergetic status, were observed in these cells. SS-31 mediated protection of mitochondrial functions reversed RLG-induced cell viability defects and neurotrophin production. These findings demonstrate that RH induced astrocyte overactivation and mitochondrial dysfunction, leading to astrocyte-derived neurotrophin disturbance, which might contribute to diabetic cognitive decline. Targeting astrocyte mitochondria might represent a neuroprotective therapy for hypoglycemia-associated neurodegeneration in diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: Astrocytes; Cognitive decline; Diabetes; Mitochondrial function; Recurrent low glucose; Recurrent non-severe hypoglycemia
Year: 2021 PMID: 33545179 DOI: 10.1016/j.mce.2021.111192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Endocrinol ISSN: 0303-7207 Impact factor: 4.102