glucose condition
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Revathi Iyer ◽  
Paike Jayadeva Bhat

Abstract In Saccharomyces cerevisae , the diploid cells undergo either pseudohyphal differentiation or sporulation in response to carbon and nitrogen source depletion. Distinct pathways are known to regulate the processes of filamentation and sporulation in response to nutritional stress. Here, we report the novel finding that the trehalose pathway which is essential for sporulation, is involved in pseudohyphae formation both via GPR1 as well as RAS2 mediated signaling. Our observations indicate that GPR1 is epistatic over TPS1 in signaling for filamentation. Further, we have demonstrated that the pseudohyphal defect of the ras2 mutant is overcome upon disruption of TPS2 . Thus, our results indicate that TPS1 and TPS2 may be involved in cell fate decision between meiosis and filamentation response under nutrient depleting conditions. Further, monitoring pseudohyphae formation under limiting glucose condition unravelled the possibility that TPS1 and TPS2 exert opposing effects to trigger filamentation response.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Miao Chen ◽  
Dian Jing ◽  
Rui Ye ◽  
Jianru Yi ◽  
Zhihe Zhao

Abstract Background Diabetic patients are more vulnerable to skeletal complications. Peroxisome proliferators-activated receptor (PPAR) β/δ has a positive regulatory effect on bone turnover under physiologic glucose concentration; however, the regulatory effect in diabetes mellitus has not been investigated yet. Herein, we explored the effects of PPARβ/δ agonist on the regeneration of diabetic bone defects and the osteogenic differentiation of rat bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (rBMSCs) under a pathological high-glucose condition. Methods We detected the effect of PPARβ/δ agonist on osteogenic differentiation of rBMSCs in vitro and investigated the bone healing process in diabetic rats after PPARβ/δ agonist treatment in vivo. RNA sequencing was performed to detect the differentially expressed genes and enriched pathways. Western blot was performed to detect the autophagy-related protein level. Laser confocal microscope (LSCM) and transmission electron microscope (TEM) were used to observe the formation of autophagosomes. Results Our results demonstrated that the activation of PPARβ/δ can improve the osteogenic differentiation of rBMSCs in high-glucose condition and promote the bone regeneration of calvarial defects in diabetic rats, while the inhibition of PPARβ/δ alleviated the osteogenic differentiation of rBMSCs. Mechanistically, the activation of PPARβ/δ up-regulates AMPK phosphorylation, yielding mTOR suppression and resulting in enhanced autophagy activity, which further promotes the osteogenic differentiation of rBMSCs in high-glucose condition. The addition of AMPK inhibitor Compound C or autophagy inhibitor 3-MA inhibited the osteogenesis of rBMSCs in high-glucose condition, suggesting that PPARβ/δ agonist promotes osteogenic differentiation of rBMSCs through AMPK/mTOR-regulated autophagy. Conclusion In conclusion, our study demonstrates the potential role of PPARβ/δ as a molecular target for the treatment of impaired bone quality and delayed bone healing in diabetic patients for the first time.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (21) ◽  
pp. 6577
Author(s):  
Yi-Ju Chen ◽  
Ching-Fang Chang ◽  
Jayaraman Angayarkanni ◽  
Wan-Teng Lin

Sarcopenia is an aging associated disorder involving skeletal muscle atrophy and a reduction in muscle strength, and there are no pharmaceutical interventions available thus far. Moreover, conditions such as hyperglycaemia are known to further intensify muscle degradation. Therefore, novel strategies to attenuate skeletal muscle loss are essential to enhance muscle function and thereby improve the quality of life in diabetic individuals. In this study, we have investigated the efficiency of a potato peptide hydrolysate PPH902 for its cytoprotective effects in skeletal muscle cells. PPH902 treatment in C2C12 cells showed the dose-dependent activation of the Akt/mTOR signalling pathway that is involved in skeletal myogenesis. According to Western blotting analysis, PPH902 induced the phosphorylation of Akt, mTOR proteins and induced the myogenic differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts in a differentiation medium. The phosphorylation myogenic transcription factor Foxo3A was also found to be increased in the cells treated with PPH902. In addition, treatment with PPH902 ameliorated the high glucose induced reduction in cell viability in a dose-dependent manner. Moreover, the number of myotubes in a differentiation medium reduced upon high glucose challenge, but treatment with PPH902 increased the number of differentiated myotubes. Further, the phosphorylations of AMPK and mitochondrial-related transcription factors such as PGC-1α were suppressed upon high glucose challenge but PPH902 treatment restored the protein levels. We demonstrate, for the first time, that a specific potato peptide has a therapeutic effect against sarcopenia. In addition, PPH902 improved the myogenic differentiation and their mitochondrial biogenesis and further improved myogenic protein and inhibited muscle protein degradation in C2C12 cells challenged under a high glucose condition.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vivek Kumar Soni ◽  
Arundhati Mehta ◽  
Yashwant Kumar Ratre ◽  
Vikas Chandra ◽  
Dhananjay Shukla ◽  
...  

Along with direct anticancer activity, curcumin hinders the onset of chemoresistance. Among many, high glucose condition is a key driving factor for chemoresistance. However, the ability of curcumin remains unexplored against high glucose-induced chemoresistance. Moreover, chemoresistance is major hindrance in effective clinical management of liver cancer. Using hepatic carcinoma HepG2 cells, the present investigation demonstrates that high glucose induces chemoresistance, which is averted by the simultaneous presence of curcumin. Curcumin obviated the hyperglycemia-induced modulations like elevated glucose consumption, lactate production, and extracellular acidification, and diminished nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Modulated molecular regulators are suggested to play a crucial role as curcumin pretreatment also prevented the onset of chemoresistance by high glucose. High glucose instigated suppression in the intracellular accumulation of anticancer drug doxorubicin and drug-induced chromatin compactness along with declined expression of drug efflux pump MDR-1 and transcription factors and signal transducers governing the survival, aggressiveness, and apoptotic cell death (p53, HIF-1α, mTOR, MYC, STAT3). Curcumin alleviated the suppression of drug retention and nuclear condensation along with hindering the high glucose-induced alterations in transcription factors and signal transducers. High glucose-driven resistance in cancer cells was associated with elevated expression of metabolic enzymes HKII, PFK1, GAPDH, PKM2, LDH-A, IDH3A, and FASN. Metabolite transporters and receptors (GLUT-1, MCT-1, MCT-4, and HCAR-1) were also found upregulated in high glucose exposed HepG2 cells. Curcumin inhibited the elevated expression of these enzymes, transporters, and receptors in cancer cells. Curcumin also uplifted the SDH expression, which was inhibited in high glucose condition. Taken together, the findings of the present investigation first time demonstrate the ability of curcumin against high glucose-induced chemoresistance, along with its molecular mechanism. This will have implication in therapeutic management of malignancies in diabetic conditions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. e001898
Author(s):  
Xindan Xing ◽  
Hanying Wang ◽  
Tian Niu ◽  
Yan Jiang ◽  
Xin Shi ◽  
...  

IntroductionThis study aims to determine whether high glucose condition and dynamic O-linked N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) modification can promote the proliferation and migration of human retinal microvascular endothelial cells (HRMECs) and whether Runt-related transcription factor 1 (RUNX1) could mediate the glucose and O-GlcNAc-driven proliferation and migration of HRMECs.Research design and methodsWestern blot analysis was used to detect the O-GlcNAc modification level and RUNX1 level in cells and retina tissues, cell growth was studied by cell counting kit-8 assay, cell proliferation was detected by immunofluorescence staining. Then, cell migration and tube formation were investigated by scratch-wound assay, Transwell assay, and tube-forming assay. The changes of retinal structure were detected by H&E staining. The O-GlcNAc modification of RUNX1 was detected by immunoprecipitation.ResultsHigh glucose increases pan-cellular O-GlcNAc modification and the proliferation and migration of HRMECs. Hence, O-GlcNAc modification is critical for the proliferation and migration of HRMECs. RUNX1 mediates the glucose and O-GlcNAc-driven proliferation and migration in HRMECs. RUNX1 can be modified by O-GlcNAc, and that the modification is enhanced in a high glucose environment.ConclusionsThe present study reveals that high glucose condition directly affects retinal endothelial cells (EC) function, and O-GlcNAc modification is critical for the proliferation and migration of HRMECs, RUNX1 may take part in this mechanism, and maybe the function of RUNX1 is related to its O-GlcNAc modification level, which provides a new perspective for studying the mechanism of RUNX1 in diabetic retinopathy.


PeerJ ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. e11817
Author(s):  
Yang Yang ◽  
Jing Zhou ◽  
Wei hong Li ◽  
Zhi xiong Zhou ◽  
Xiao bo Xia

Aim Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells is the key of the development of diabetic retinopathy (DR), and lncRNA NEAT1 could accelerate EMT in diabetic nephropathy. Meanwhile, as a diabetes susceptibility gene, whether sex-determining region Y-related (SRY) high-mobility group box 4 (SOX4) has relationship with lncRNA NEAT1 in DR remains unclear. Methods Firstly, NEAT1, SOX4 and miR-204 were evaluated by qRT-PCR (quantitative reverse-transcriptase PCR) under high glucose condition. Then, cell viability, proliferation, migration and invasion were respectively detected by MTT, BrdU staining, wound healing and transwell assay after NEAT1 knockdown or miR-204 overexpression. Also, the EMT-related proteins were examined by western blot and cell immunofluorescence assay. In order to confirm the relationship between miR-204 and NEAT1 or SOX4, dual luciferase reporter gene assay was conducted. At the same time, the protein levels of SOX4 and EMT-related proteins were investigated by immunohistochemistry in vivo. Results High glucose upregulated NEAT1 and SOX4 and downregulated miR-204 in ARPE19 cells. NEAT1 knockdown or miR-204 overexpression inhibited the proliferation and EMT progression of ARPE19 cells induced by high glucose. NEAT1 was identified as a molecular sponge of miR-204 to increase the level of SOX4. The effect of NEAT1 knockdown on the progression of EMT under high glucose condition in ARPE19 cells could be reversed by miR-204 inhibitor. Also, NEAT1 knockdown inhibited retinal EMT in diabetic mice. Conclusion NEAT1 regulated the development of EMT in DR through miR-204/SOX4 pathway, which could provide reference for clinical prevention and treatment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (13) ◽  
pp. 7233
Author(s):  
Hsin-Wei Huang ◽  
Chung-May Yang ◽  
Chang-Hao Yang

Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a common complication of diabetes that causes severe visual impairment globally. The pathogenesis of DR is related to oxidative stress and chronic inflammation. The fibroblast growth factor type 1 (FGF-1) mitogen plays crucial roles in cell function, development, and metabolism. FGF-1 is involved in blood sugar regulation and exerts beneficial antioxidative and anti-inflammatory effects on various organ systems. This study investigated the antioxidative and anti-inflammatory neuroprotective effects of FGF-1 on high-glucose-induced retinal damage. The results revealed that FGF-1 treatment significantly reversed the harmful effects of oxidative stress and inflammatory mediators in retinal tissue in a streptozotocin-induced diabetic rat model. These protective effects were also observed in the in vitro model of retinal ARPE-19 cells exposed to a high-glucose condition. We demonstrated that FGF-1 attenuated p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase and nuclear factor-κB pathway activation under the high-glucose condition. Our results indicated that FGF-1 could effectively prevent retinal injury in diabetes. The findings of this study could be used to develop novel treatments for DR that aim to reduce the cascade of oxidative stress and inflammatory signals in neuroretinal tissue.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunxiong Luo ◽  
Wenting Shen ◽  
Ziqing Gao ◽  
Kaiyue Chen ◽  
Qi Ouyang

Cells always make responses to environmental changes, involving dynamic expression of tens to hundreds of proteins. This response system may demand substantial cost and thus affect cell growth. Here, we studied the cell's responses to osmostress under glucose-limitation environments. Through analyzed thirteen osmotic-downstream proteins and two related transcription factors, we found that the cells required stronger responses under low glucose concentrations than normal glucose condition after being stimulated by osmostress, even the cell growth rate was unchanged in these two constant conditions. We proposed and verified that under a glucose-limitation environment, the glycolysis intermediates were limited (defense reserve saving), which caused that cells needed more glycerol production enzymes to adapt to the osmostress. Further experiments proved that this 'defense reserve-saving' strategy required cells to spend more response cost when facing stress, which on the other hand, enhanced the fitness for the coming environment variations via protein accumulation reserve.


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