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Molecular Medicine |
From the Signal Transduction Laboratory (L.W., A.H., C.W., J.R.G., M.A.V., P.X.), Division of Human Immunology, Hanson Institute, Institute of Medical and Veterinary Science, Adelaide, Australia; Department of Medicine (J.R.G., M.A.V., P.X.), University of Adelaide, Australia; and Department of Endocrinology (X.-P.X.), Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Beijing, China.
Correspondence to Pu Xia, MD, Hanson Institute, Frome Rd, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia. E-mail pu.xia{at}imvs.sa.gov.au
Vascular endothelial cells are key targets for hyperglycemic damage that facilitates vascular inflammation and the vasculopathy associated with diabetes mellitus. However, the mechanisms underlying this damage remain undefined. We now demonstrate that hyperglycemia induces activation of sphingosine kinase (SphK), which represents a novel signaling pathway that mediates endothelial damage under ambient high glucose conditions. SphK activity was significantly increased in aorta and heart of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. Interestingly, this increase in SphK activity was prevented by insulin treatment, which achieved euglycemia in the diabetic animals. Hyperglycemia-induced increase in SphK activity was also evident in endothelial cells that received long-term exposure to high glucose (22 mmol/L). Studies using a small interfering RNA strategy demonstrated that endogenous SphK1, but not SphK2, is the major isoenzyme that was activated by high glucose. In addition, an increase in SphK1 phosphorylation was detected in a protein kinase C and extracellular signalregulated kinase 1/2dependent manner, which accounts for the high glucoseinduced increases in SphK activity. Importantly, inhibition of SphK1 by either a chemical inhibitor (N',N'-dimethylsphingosine) or expression of a dominant-negative mutant of SphK1 (SphKG82D), or SphK1-specific small interfering RNA, strongly protected endothelial cells against high glucoseinduced damage, as characterized by an attenuation in the expression of proinflammatory adhesion molecules, adhesion of leukocytes to endothelial cells, and nuclear factor
B activation. Thus, interventions that target the SphK-signaling pathway may have the potential to prevent vascular lesions under hyperglycemic conditions.
Key Words: diabetes endothelial cells hyperglycemia sphingosine kinase vascular inflammation
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