The complications of diabetes are myriad and represent a rising cause of morbidity and mortality, particularly in the Western world. The update of the Diabetes Control and Clinical Trials Group/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications Research Group (DCCT/EDIC) suggested that previous strict control of hyperglycaemia was associated with reduced carotid atherosclerosis compared to conventional treatment, even after levels of glycosylated haemoglobin between the two treatment groups became indistinguishable. These intriguing findings prompt the key question, why does the blood vessel ‘remember’? This review focuses on the hypothesis that the ligand/RAGE axis contributes importantly to glycaemic ‘memory’. Studies in rodent models of diabetes suggest that blockade or genetic modification of RAGE suppress diabetes-associated progression of atherosclerosis, exaggerated neointimal expansion consequent to acute arterial injury, and cardiac dysfunction. We propose that therapeutic RAGE blockade will intercept maladaptive diabetes-associated memory in the vessel wall and provide cardiovascular protection in diabetes.

RAGE and its ligands: a lasting memory in diabetic complications? / S. Yan, R. Ramasamy, L. Bucciarelli, T. Wendt, L. Lee, B. Hudson, D. Stern, E. Lalla, S. DU Yan, L. Rong, Y. Naka, A. Schmidt. - In: DIABETES & VASCULAR DISEASE RESEARCH. - ISSN 1479-1641. - 1:1(2004 May), pp. 10-20. [10.3132/dvdr.2004.001]

RAGE and its ligands: a lasting memory in diabetic complications?

L. Bucciarelli;
2004

Abstract

The complications of diabetes are myriad and represent a rising cause of morbidity and mortality, particularly in the Western world. The update of the Diabetes Control and Clinical Trials Group/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications Research Group (DCCT/EDIC) suggested that previous strict control of hyperglycaemia was associated with reduced carotid atherosclerosis compared to conventional treatment, even after levels of glycosylated haemoglobin between the two treatment groups became indistinguishable. These intriguing findings prompt the key question, why does the blood vessel ‘remember’? This review focuses on the hypothesis that the ligand/RAGE axis contributes importantly to glycaemic ‘memory’. Studies in rodent models of diabetes suggest that blockade or genetic modification of RAGE suppress diabetes-associated progression of atherosclerosis, exaggerated neointimal expansion consequent to acute arterial injury, and cardiac dysfunction. We propose that therapeutic RAGE blockade will intercept maladaptive diabetes-associated memory in the vessel wall and provide cardiovascular protection in diabetes.
amphoterin; glycaemic memory; mononuclear phagocytes; receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE); S100/calgranulins
Settore MED/13 - Endocrinologia
mag-2004
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1045751
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