Cargando…

Effects of C-peptide on Microvascular Blood Flow and Blood Hemorheology

Beside functional and structural changes in vascular biology, alterations in the rheologic properties of blood cells mainly determines to an impaired microvascular blood flow in patients suffering from diabetes mellitus. Recent investigations provide increasing evidence that impaired C-peptide secre...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Forst, T., Kunt, T.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2478621/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15198371
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15438600490424532
_version_ 1782157604583112704
author Forst, T.
Kunt, T.
author_facet Forst, T.
Kunt, T.
author_sort Forst, T.
collection PubMed
description Beside functional and structural changes in vascular biology, alterations in the rheologic properties of blood cells mainly determines to an impaired microvascular blood flow in patients suffering from diabetes mellitus. Recent investigations provide increasing evidence that impaired C-peptide secretion in type 1 diabetic patients might contribute to the development of microvascular complications. C-peptide has been shown to stimulate endothelial NO secretion by activation of the Ca(2+) calmodolin regulated enzyme eNOS. NO himself has the potency to increase cGMP levels in smooth muscle cells and to activate Na(+) K(+) ATPase activity and therefore evolves numerous effects in microvascular regulation. In type 1 diabetic patients, supplementation of C-peptide was shown to improve endothelium dependent vasodilatation in an NO-dependent pathway in different vascular compartments. In addition, it could be shown that C-peptide administration in type 1 diabetic patients, results in a redistribution of skin blood flow by increasing nutritive capillary blood flow in favour to subpapillary blood flow. Impaired Na(+) K(+) ATPase in another feature of diabetes mellitus in many cell types and is believed to be a pivotal regulator of various cell functions. C-peptide supplementation has been shown to restore Na(+) K(+)ATPase activity in different cell types during in vitro and in vivo investigations. In type 1 diabetic patients, C-peptide supplementation was shown to increase erythrocyte Na(+) K(+)ATPase activity by about 100%. There was found a linear relationship between plasma C-peptide levels and erythrocyte Na(+) K(+)ATPase activity. In small capillaries, microvascular blood flow is increasingly determined by the rheologic properties of erythrocytes. Using laser-diffractoscopie a huge improvement in erythrocyte deformability could be observed after C-peptide administration in erythrocytes of type 1 diabetic patients. Inhibition of the Na(+) K(+)ATPase by Obain completely abolished the effect of C-peptide on erythrocyte deformability. In conclusion, C-peptide improves microvascular function and blood flow in type 1 diabetic patients by interfering with vascular and rheological components of microvascular blood flow.
format Text
id pubmed-2478621
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2004
publisher Hindawi Publishing Corporation
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-24786212008-08-18 Effects of C-peptide on Microvascular Blood Flow and Blood Hemorheology Forst, T. Kunt, T. Exp Diabesity Res Research Article Beside functional and structural changes in vascular biology, alterations in the rheologic properties of blood cells mainly determines to an impaired microvascular blood flow in patients suffering from diabetes mellitus. Recent investigations provide increasing evidence that impaired C-peptide secretion in type 1 diabetic patients might contribute to the development of microvascular complications. C-peptide has been shown to stimulate endothelial NO secretion by activation of the Ca(2+) calmodolin regulated enzyme eNOS. NO himself has the potency to increase cGMP levels in smooth muscle cells and to activate Na(+) K(+) ATPase activity and therefore evolves numerous effects in microvascular regulation. In type 1 diabetic patients, supplementation of C-peptide was shown to improve endothelium dependent vasodilatation in an NO-dependent pathway in different vascular compartments. In addition, it could be shown that C-peptide administration in type 1 diabetic patients, results in a redistribution of skin blood flow by increasing nutritive capillary blood flow in favour to subpapillary blood flow. Impaired Na(+) K(+) ATPase in another feature of diabetes mellitus in many cell types and is believed to be a pivotal regulator of various cell functions. C-peptide supplementation has been shown to restore Na(+) K(+)ATPase activity in different cell types during in vitro and in vivo investigations. In type 1 diabetic patients, C-peptide supplementation was shown to increase erythrocyte Na(+) K(+)ATPase activity by about 100%. There was found a linear relationship between plasma C-peptide levels and erythrocyte Na(+) K(+)ATPase activity. In small capillaries, microvascular blood flow is increasingly determined by the rheologic properties of erythrocytes. Using laser-diffractoscopie a huge improvement in erythrocyte deformability could be observed after C-peptide administration in erythrocytes of type 1 diabetic patients. Inhibition of the Na(+) K(+)ATPase by Obain completely abolished the effect of C-peptide on erythrocyte deformability. In conclusion, C-peptide improves microvascular function and blood flow in type 1 diabetic patients by interfering with vascular and rheological components of microvascular blood flow. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2004 /pmc/articles/PMC2478621/ /pubmed/15198371 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15438600490424532 Text en Copyright © 2004 Hindawi Publishing Corporation. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Forst, T.
Kunt, T.
Effects of C-peptide on Microvascular Blood Flow and Blood Hemorheology
title Effects of C-peptide on Microvascular Blood Flow and Blood Hemorheology
title_full Effects of C-peptide on Microvascular Blood Flow and Blood Hemorheology
title_fullStr Effects of C-peptide on Microvascular Blood Flow and Blood Hemorheology
title_full_unstemmed Effects of C-peptide on Microvascular Blood Flow and Blood Hemorheology
title_short Effects of C-peptide on Microvascular Blood Flow and Blood Hemorheology
title_sort effects of c-peptide on microvascular blood flow and blood hemorheology
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2478621/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15198371
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15438600490424532
work_keys_str_mv AT forstt effectsofcpeptideonmicrovascularbloodflowandbloodhemorheology
AT kuntt effectsofcpeptideonmicrovascularbloodflowandbloodhemorheology