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Chronic hyperglycaemia increases the vulnerability of the hippocampus to oxidative damage induced during post-hypoglycaemic hyperglycaemia in a mouse model of chemically induced type 1 diabetes

Alison D. McNeilly, Jennifer Gallagher, Mark L. Evans, Bastiaan E. de Galan, Ulrik Pedersen‐Bjergaard, Bernard Thorens, Albena T. Dinkova‐Kostova, Jeffrey Huang, Michael L.J. Ashford, Rory J. McCrimmon

2023Diabetologia14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Chronic hyperglycaemia and recurrent hypoglycaemia are independently associated with accelerated cognitive decline in type 1 diabetes. Recurrent hypoglycaemia in rodent models of chemically induced (streptozotocin [STZ]) diabetes leads to cognitive impairment in memory-related tasks associated with hippocampal oxidative damage. This study examined the hypothesis that post-hypoglycaemic hyperglycaemia in STZ-diabetes exacerbates hippocampal oxidative stress and explored potential contributory mechanisms. METHODS: mice (lacking Nrf2 [also known as Nfe2l2]). Subsequently, quantitative proteomics based on stable isotope labelling by amino acids in cell culture and biochemical approaches were used to assess oxidative damage and explore contributory pathways. RESULTS: Evidence of hippocampal oxidative damage was most marked in mice with STZ-diabetes exposed to post-hypoglycaemic hyperglycaemia; these mice also showed induction of Nrf2 and the Nrf2 transcriptional targets Sod2 and Hmox-1. In this group, hypoglycaemia induced a significant upregulation of proteins involved in alternative fuel provision, reductive biosynthesis and degradation of damaged proteins, and a significant downregulation of proteins mediating the stress response. Key differences emerged between mice with and without STZ-diabetes following recovery from hypoglycaemia in proteins mediating the stress response and reductive biosynthesis. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: There is a disruption of the cellular response to a hypoglycaemic challenge in mice with STZ-induced diabetes that is not seen in wild-type non-diabetic animals. The chronic hyperglycaemia of diabetes and post-hypoglycaemic hyperglycaemia act synergistically to induce oxidative stress and damage in the hippocampus, possibly leading to irreversible damage/modification to proteins or synapses between cells. In conclusion, recurrent hypoglycaemia in sub-optimally controlled diabetes may contribute, at least in part, to accelerated cognitive decline through amplifying oxidative damage in key brain regions, such as the hippocampus. DATA AVAILABILITY: The datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available in ProteomeXchange, accession no. 1-20220824-173727 ( www.proteomexchange.org ). Additional datasets generated during and/or analysed during the present study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.

Topics & Concepts

EndocrinologyOxidative stressInternal medicineDiabetes mellitusType 2 diabetesMedicineHippocampusOxidative phosphorylationType 2 Diabetes MellitusBiologyBiochemistryAdvanced Glycation End Products researchTryptophan and brain disordersGenomics, phytochemicals, and oxidative stress
Chronic hyperglycaemia increases the vulnerability of the hippocampus to oxidative damage induced during post-hypoglycaemic hyperglycaemia in a mouse model of chemically induced type 1 diabetes | Litcius