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High-glucose--triggered apoptosis in cultured endothelial cells.

  1. S M Baumgartner-Parzer,
  2. L Wagner,
  3. M Pettermann,
  4. J Grillari,
  5. A Gessl and
  6. W Waldhäusl
  1. Department of Internal Medicine III, University of Vienna, Austria.

    Abstract

    High ambient glucose concentration, linked to vascular complications in diabetes in vivo, modulates mRNA expression of fibronectin, collagen, tissue-type plasminogen activator, and plasminogen activator inhibitor and induces delayed replication and excess cell death in cultured vascular endothelial cells. To determine the role of high ambient glucose (30 mmol/l) in apoptosis, paired cultures of individual isolates of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were exposed to both high (30 mmol/l) and low (5 mmol/l) concentrations of glucose for short-term (24, 48, and 72 h) and long-term (13 +/- 1 days) experiments. Incubation of HUVECs with high glucose for > 48 h increased DNA fragmentation (13.7 +/- 6.5% of total DNA, mean +/- SD) versus cultures kept in 5 mmol/l glucose (10.9 +/- 5.6%, P < 0.005), as measured by [3H]thymidine assays. Data were confirmed by apoptosis-specific fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis of confluent HUVEC cultures, which displayed after long-term exposure to 30 mmol/l glucose a 1.5-fold higher prevalence of apoptosis than control cultures exposed to 5 mmol/l glucose (P < 0.005). In contrast, no increase in DNA fragmentation in response to 30 mmol/l glucose was seen for standardized cell lines (K 562, P 815, YT) and fibroblasts. Expression of clusterin mRNA, originally reported to be a molecular marker of apoptosis, was only slightly affected by short-term (24-h) high-glucose exposure but was significantly reduced after long-term incubation in 30 mmol/l glucose (82.2 +/- 13.8% of control) versus 5 mmol/l glucose, which questions the role of clusterin gene expression as a marker of apoptosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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