| Literature DB >> 33869173 |
So Sampei1,2, Hideshi Okada1, Hiroyuki Tomita3, Chihiro Takada1, Kodai Suzuki1, Takamasa Kinoshita3,4, Ryo Kobayashi5, Hirotsugu Fukuda1, Yuki Kawasaki1, Ayane Nishio1, Hirohisa Yano1, Isamu Muraki1, Yohei Fukuda1, Keiko Suzuki5, Nagisa Miyazaki6, Takatomo Watanabe7, Tomoaki Doi1, Takahiro Yoshida1, Akio Suzuki5, Shozo Yoshida1, Shigeki Kushimoto2, Shinji Ogura1.
Abstract
In diabetes mellitus (DM) patients, the morbidity of infectious disease is increased, and these infections can easily progress from local to systemic infection. Sepsis is a characteristic of organ failure related to microcirculation disorders resulting from endothelial cell injury, whose most frequent comorbidity in patients is DM. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the influence of infection on DM-induced microvascular damage on inflammation and pulmonary endothelial structure using an experimental endotoxemia model. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 15 mg/kg) was injected intraperitoneally into 10-week-old male C57BLKS/J Iar- + lepr db /lepr db (db/db) mice and into C57BLKS/J Iar-m + / + lepr db (db/ +) mice, which served as the littermate non-diabetic control. At 48 h after LPS administration, the survival rate of db/db mice (0%, 0/10) was markedly lower (P < 0.05) than that of the db/ + mice (75%, 18/24), whereas the survival rate was 100% in both groups 24 h after LPS administration. In control mice, CD11b-positive cells increased at 6 h after LPS administration; by comparison, the number of CD11b-positive cells increased gradually in db/db mice until 12 h after LPS injection. In the control group, the number of Iba-1-positive cells did not significantly increase before and at 6, 12, and 24 h after LPS injection. Conversely, Iba-1-positive cells continued to increase until 24 h after LPS administration, and this increase was significantly greater than that in the control mice. Expression of Ext1, Csgalnact1, and Vcan related to endothelial glycocalyx synthesis was significantly lower in db/db mice than in the control mice before LPS administration, indicating that endothelial glycocalyx synthesis is attenuated in db/db/mice. In addition, ultrastructural analysis revealed that endothelial glycocalyx was thinner in db/db mice before LPS injection. In conclusion, in db/db mice, the endothelial glycocalyx is already injured before LPS administration, and migration of inflammatory cells is both delayed and expanded. This extended inflammation may be involved in endothelial glycocalyx damage due to the attenuation of endothelial glycocalyx synthesis.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes; endothelium; glycocalyx; inflammation; lipopolysaccharide
Year: 2021 PMID: 33869173 PMCID: PMC8047120 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.623582
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1Phenotype of db/db mice under normal conditions. Serum (A) blood sugar, (B) HbA1c, (C) blood urea nitrogen, (D) creatinine, (E) aspartate aminotransferase, and (F) alanine transferase concentration: blood sugar, HbA1c, blood urea nitrogen, and alanine transferase concentrations were significantly higher in db/db mice (n = 6) than in the wild-type mice (n = 6). *, P < 0.05 vs. wild type.
FIGURE 2Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced lung injury is accelerated in db/db mice compared with in control mice. (A) Kaplan–Meier survival curves for control mice (n = 24) and LPS-treated mice (n = 10). (B) Serum interleukin 1β (IL-1β) was measured in mice using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. (C) Hematoxylin and eosin-stained lung tissues. Arrows indicate neutrophil infiltration. (D) Graphs of the histologic scoring of lung injury around the pulmonary edema. (E) Hematoxylin and eosin-stained lung tissues. (F) Arrows indicate edema. Graphs of the histologic scoring of lung injury around neutrophil filtration. n = 6 mice per group. *, P < 0.05.
FIGURE 3Modulation of inflammatory cells under endotoxemic conditions. (A1) CD11b-positive cells were quantified as numbers of cells per high-power field. (A2) Representative images of CD11b cells in immunostained lung specimens. (B1) Iba-1 positive cells were quantified as the number of cells per high-power field. (B2) Representative images of Iba-1 in immunostained lung samples. *, P < 0.05.
FIGURE 4Pulmonary endothelial glycocalyx is injured in db/db mice. (A) Serum syndecan-1 was measured in mice using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. (B) Tomato lectin intensity of control and db/db mouse lungs with and without LPS administration. *, P < 0.05 vs. non-LPS-injected control mice; +, P < 0.05 vs. LPS-injected control mice. (C–H) qRT-PCR for (C) SDC1, (D) Has1, (E) Has2, (F) Csgalnact1, (G) Ext1, and (H) Vcan in control and db/db mice under normal conditions. *, P < 0.05.
FIGURE 5Ultrastructural imaging of pulmonary endothelial injury by SEM. (A) Images for samples not stained with lanthanum nitrate; the endothelial glycocalyx was not detected. (B) The endothelial glycocalyx was detected using lanthanum nitrate staining. Although the moss-like structure of the endothelial glycocalyx covered the surface of the vascular endothelium in the control group mice under normal conditions, the endothelial glycocalyx structure was already degraded and dispersed (white arrow) in db/db mice. After LPS injection, the endothelial glycocalyx was degraded completely in db/db mice, whereas its injury was attenuated in control mice.
FIGURE 6Ultrastructural imaging of pulmonary endothelial injury by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). (A) Images taken from samples not stained with lanthanum nitrate; the endothelial glycocalyx was not detected. The pulmonary endothelium was thin and smooth in control mice before LPS injection. In control mice after LPS injection, the endothelial wall became edematous, but the extent of this was greater in db/db mice than in control mice treated with or without LPS. (B) The endothelial glycocalyx was detected using lanthanum nitrate staining. The endothelial glycocalyx structure showed greater degradation in db/db mice than in control mice under normal conditions. After LPS injection, the endothelial glycocalyx formed a skip lesion in control mice, whereas the endothelial glycocalyx was more degraded in db/db mice. Black arrows indicate the endothelial glycocalyx.