Elevated arginase levels contribute to vascular eye disease such as diabetic retinopathy
August 18, 2009
Drs. Wenbo Zhang (from left), Ruth Caldwell and R. William Caldwell have shown that elevated levels of the enzyme arginase contribute to vascular eye damage in diseases such as diabetic retinopathy. Credit: Medical College of Georgia
Elevated levels of the enzyme arginase contribute to vascular eye damage and Medical College of Georgia researchers say therapies to normalize its levels could halt progression of potentially blinding diseases such as diabetic retinopathy.
Their work, published in the August issue of The American Journal of Pathology, is the first to make the connection between eye disease and arginase, an enzyme known to be a player in cardiovascular disease, according to researchers at MCG and Charlie Norwood Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
"The goal is to find a new strategy for preventing progression of diabetic retinopathy," says Dr. Ruth Caldwell, a cell biologist at the MCG School of Medicine and VA Medical Center, and the study's corresponding author.
Because they could measure arginase levels in the blood, it also could become a biomarker for a disease process that can work silently in the eye for months or even years, she says.
More broadly, understanding just how arginase regulates inflammation should lead to new therapies for many acute and chronic inflammatory diseases in the eyes and other organs, says Dr. Wenbo Zhang, postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Caldwell' lab and the paper's first author.
The researchers suspect an elevated arginase level is a red flag of early vascular damage in the eyes as well as the heart, kidneys and other organs. "We don't think this is going to be specific to the retina," Dr. Caldwell says, noting that inflammation often precedes full blown vascular disease.
"We know that people with diabetes have a greater incidence of heart attack and we know that vision is a sense that suffers greatly in diabetes," says Dr. R. William Caldwell, study co-author who chairs the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology in the MCG School of Medicine. "We are finding arginase is a common player."
To create an animal model of the inflammation that occurs early in vascular eye disease, they used bacterial proteins to produce a severe and rapid inflammation of the eye called uveitis, which can also cause blindness but is easier to detect and treat than diabetic retinopathy.
"Inflammation of the blood vessel walls in the retina is some of the earliest eye damage that occurs in diabetes. This is like hitting the same system with a sledge hammer," Dr. Ruth Caldwell says. Short term, inflammation causes redness and irritation as it lays the groundwork for an unhealthy remodeling of blood vessel walls that restricts blood flow.
Inside the diabetic eye, high glucose levels trigger inflammation and, in an apparent effort to fight it, arginase actually ends up contributing to inflammation and vascular disease as well. The crux of the problem seems to be too much competition for L-arginine, an amino acid arginase requires to take any action - good or bad, says Dr. William Caldwell.
The retina, located at the back of the eye, is essentially an extension of the brain that receives light and transforms it to a neural impulse that travels back to the brain via the optic nerve. It can withstand assaults, such as elevated glucose levels that occur in diabetes, for years before vascular cells become damaged and die. That destruction spurs development of new blood vessels to deliver oxygen to oxygen-starved tissue but instead the proliferation blocks vision and they leak, increasing retinal damage.
Early in the diabetic process, high levels of glucose trigger high levels of inducible nitric oxide synthase, which makes nitric oxide. Under conditions of acute inflammation, nitric oxide helps control injury by killing off invaders. But during diabetes, it increases oxidative stress, causing further tissue damage. As part of the fight, arginase increases to provide substrates for tissue repair and to dampen the actions of inducible nitric oxide synthase. The complicating news is that nitric oxide synthase in endothelial cells, which makes the nitric oxide that enables blood vessels to relax, also is competing with arginase for the L-arginine.
The net effect can be too little nitric oxide inside blood vessel walls to help them relax and keep white blood cells and platelets from sticking to them.
"It's taking L-arginine away from the nitric oxide synthase so it can accelerate wound healing but the lack of substrate for nitric oxide synthase leads to vascular constriction and occlusion which causes further tissue damage, " Dr. Ruth Caldwell says. The researchers, who also are studying this process in a model of diabetic retinopathy, want to fully delineate the complex scenario. They already know high levels of the signaling molecule reactive oxygen species is another factor. As with arginase, some reactive oxygen species formation is a good thing but too much causes blood vessel damage.
"Our studies demonstrate that if we inhibit arginase, we also reduce the reactive oxygen species level and vice versa," Dr. Zhang says. "It appears that arginase and nitric oxide synthase influence each other in a positive feedback loop."
Rather than drugs that generally suppress arginase, the researchers want to find new drugs that can restore healthy levels of arginase. "You need arginase. If you don't have it, you are in big trouble," says Dr. William Caldwell. "We want to delineate the events that cause elevation and limit the elevation to prevent the resulting pathology."
The only U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved therapy to intervene in diabetic retinopathy is to use lasers to burn holes in the retina, which reduces the oxygen needs of the tissue by destroying some of it.
In related studies, Dr. William Caldwell, in conjunction with Dr. Maritza Romero, MCG assistant research scientist, has shown that in diabetes blood vessels throughout the body suffer from too much competition for L-arginine and that another amino acid, L-citrulline, as well as statin drugs used to treat cholesterol can prevent unhealthy elevation of arginase.
Source: Medical College of Georgia
-
Diabetes makes it hard for blood vessels to relax
Jan 31, 2008 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Parasites that live inside cells use loophole to thwart immune system
Nov 03, 2008 |
not rated yet |
0
-
New evidence of how high glucose damages blood vessels could lead to new treatments
May 11, 2009 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Decreasing insulin resistance prevents obesity-related cardiovascular damage
Feb 11, 2009 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Persistent bacterial infection exploits killing machinery of immune cells
Nov 02, 2008 |
not rated yet |
0
-
Engineers build first sub-10-nm carbon nanotube transistor
Feb 01, 2012 |
4.9 / 5 (33) |
30
-
Something old, something new: Evolution and the structural divergence of duplicate genes
Jan 31, 2012 |
4.6 / 5 (7) |
1
-
The hidden nanoworld of ice crystals: Revealing the dynamic behavior of quasi-liquid layers
Jan 30, 2012 |
5 / 5 (4) |
1
-
Stock market network reveals investor clustering
Jan 27, 2012 |
3.9 / 5 (23) |
8
-
Of microchemistry and molecules: Electronic microfluidic device synthesizes biocompatible probes
Jan 26, 2012 |
5 / 5 (2) |
0
-
Classical and Quantum Mechanics via Lie algebras
Apr 15, 2011
- More from Physics Forums - Independent Research
More news stories
Botox developer rues missing out on billions
Botox developer Alan Scott says he rues the day he handed over rights to the best-selling wrinkle-smoothing drug to a US company for just $4.5 million, saying he might have become a billionaire.
Medicine & Health / Medications
2 minutes ago |
not rated yet |
0
Starve a virus, feed a cure? Findings show how some cells protect themselves against HIV
A protein that protects some of our immune cells from the most common and virulent form of HIV works by starving the virus of the molecular building blocks that it needs to replicate, according to research published online ...
14 hours ago |
5 / 5 (3) |
0
|
Overeating may double risk of memory loss
New research suggests that consuming between 2,100 and 6,000 calories per day may double the risk of memory loss, or mild cognitive impairment (MCI), among people age 70 and older. The study was released today and will be ...
Medicine & Health / Neuroscience
10 hours ago |
5 / 5 (2) |
0
|
Declining health-care productivity in England: Who says so?
Reports that the National Health Service in England has been declining in productivity in the last decade appear to have been accepted as fact. However, a Viewpoint published Online First by The Lancet disputes this. The Vi ...
8 hours ago |
1 / 5 (1) |
1
Injured boomers beware: Know when to see doctor
(AP) -- It happened to nurse Jane Byron years after an in-line skating fall, business owner Haralee Weintraub while doing "men's" push-ups, and avid cyclist Gene Wilberg while lifting a heavy box.
15 hours ago |
5 / 5 (1) |
0
Japan's Fukushima reactor may be reheating: operator
Temperature readings at one of the crippled Fukushima nuclear reactors have risen above Japan's stringent new safety standard but there was no immediate danger, its operator said Sunday.
Australian women reject 'I love u' texts
Australian women may have embraced the digital era, but they prefer a face-to-face declaration of affection to an "I love u" text and find men addicted to their mobile phones a major turnoff.
Scientists discover molecular secrets of 2,000-year-old Chinese herbal remedy
For roughly two thousand years, Chinese herbalists have treated Malaria using a root extract, commonly known as Chang Shan, from a type of hydrangea that grows in Tibet and Nepal. More recent studies suggest that halofuginone, ...
New method to examine batteries -- MRI from the inside
There is an ever-increasing need for advanced batteries for portable electronics, such as phones, cameras, and music players, but also to power electric vehicles and to facilitate the distribution and storage of energy derived ...
Google might launch Drive for cloud storage soon
(PhysOrg.com) -- Google's next big move, according to the Wall Street Journal, is a cloud storage service called Drive. Hardly first to the plate, Google is simply catching up to introducing its cloud reposi ...
A mitosis mystery solved: How chromosomes align perfectly in a dividing cell
Although the process of mitotic cell division has been studied intensely for more than 50 years, Whitehead Institute researchers have only now solved the mystery of how cells correctly align their chromosomes during symmetric ...