成人2型糖尿病合并帕金森病的循环神经毒性5-HT2A受体激动剂自身抗体

Journal of endocrinology and diabetes Pub Date : 2018-01-01 Epub Date: 2018-05-10 DOI:10.15226/2374-6890/5/2/01102
Mark B Zimering
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:检测成人2型糖尿病合并帕金森病(PD)或痴呆患者的循环神经毒性自身抗体是否升高。探讨糖尿病帕金森病血浆自身抗体中神经母细胞瘤细胞g蛋白偶联受体介导的神经抑制作用。探讨糖尿病性帕金森病和痴呆自身抗体诱导神经母细胞瘤细胞加速死亡和急性神经突回缩的机制。方法:对12例患有帕金森病(n=10)或痴呆(n=2)的老年男性糖尿病患者和8例年龄匹配的对照糖尿病患者的血浆蛋白a洗脱物进行检测,以确定其引起N2A神经母细胞瘤细胞加速死亡和急性神经突退缩的能力。G蛋白偶联受体属于异三量G蛋白的G α q亚家族,磷脂酶C/肌醇三磷酸/Ca2+途径,或RhoA/Rho激酶途径的特异性拮抗剂被用于阻断糖尿病帕金森病/痴呆自身抗体诱导的神经突退缩或N2A加速细胞损失的能力。采用顺序Liposorber LA-15葡聚糖硫酸盐纤维素/蛋白a亲和层析获得高纯度的糖尿病帕金森病自身抗体。结果:糖尿病性帕金森病或痴呆自身抗体诱导的神经母细胞瘤细胞平均加速损失显著超过相同浓度的糖尿病自身抗体诱导的N2A细胞损失水平(P = 0.001),而不伴有这两种神经退行性疾病的对照患者。糖尿病帕金森病和痴呆自身抗体与200纳摩尔浓度的M100907(一种高选择性5-HT2AR拮抗剂)共培养,完全阻止了自身抗体诱导的加速N2A细胞损失和神经突收缩。较高浓度(500 nM-10μM)的α -1肾上腺素能、血管紧张素II型1或内皮素A受体拮抗剂不能显著抑制自身抗体诱导的神经母细胞瘤细胞死亡或防止神经突退缩。肌醇三磷酸受体拮抗剂(2-APB, 50μM)、细胞内钙螯合剂(BAPTA-AM, 30 μM)和选择性RhoA/Rho激酶抑制剂Y27632 (10 μM)均能完全阻断60纳摩尔浓度的糖尿病帕金森病自身抗体诱导的急性神经突缩回。与2-APB (1-2 μM)共孵育8小时,可防止自身抗体诱导的N2A细胞丢失。在高甘油三酯血症糖尿病痴呆和帕金森病患者血浆中,通过脂质脂质LA/蛋白a亲和层析获得的高纯化组分的表观分子量> 30 kD,并且显示出增强的N2A毒性,需要更高浓度的5-HT2AR拮抗剂(M100907、酮色林、spiperone)才能有效中和。结论:这些数据表明,老年糖尿病合并帕金森病或痴呆患者自身抗体增加,通过5-羟色胺2受体偶联到肌醇三磷酸受体介导的胞质Ca2+释放,导致神经元加速丢失。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Circulating Neurotoxic 5-HT2A Receptor Agonist Autoantibodies in Adult Type 2 Diabetes with Parkinson's Disease.

Circulating Neurotoxic 5-HT2A Receptor Agonist Autoantibodies in Adult Type 2 Diabetes with Parkinson's Disease.

Circulating Neurotoxic 5-HT2A Receptor Agonist Autoantibodies in Adult Type 2 Diabetes with Parkinson's Disease.

Aims: To test whether circulating neurotoxic autoantibodies increase in adult type 2 diabetes mellitus with Parkinson's disease (PD) or dementia. To identify the G-protein coupled receptor on neuroblastoma cells mediating neural inhibitory effects in diabetic Parkinson's disease plasma autoantibodies. To determine the mechanism of accelerated neuroblastoma cell death and acute neurite retraction induced by diabetic Parkinson's disease and dementia autoantibodies.

Methods: Protein-A eluates from plasma of twelve older adult male diabetic patients having Parkinson's disease (n=10) or dementia (n=2), and eight age-matched control diabetic patients were tested for ability to cause accelerated N2A neuroblastoma cell death and acute neurite retraction. Specific antagonists of G protein coupled receptors belonging to the G alpha q subfamily of heterotrimetric G-proteins, the phospholipase C/inositol triphosphate/Ca2+ pathway, or the RhoA/Rho kinase pathway were tested for ability to block diabetic Parkinson's disease/dementia autoantibody-induced neurite retraction or N2A accelerated cell loss. Sequential Liposorber LA-15 dextran sulfate cellulose/protein-A affinity chromatography was used to obtain highly-purified fractions of diabetic Parkinson's disease autoantibodies.

Results: Mean accelerated neuroblastoma cell loss induced by diabetic Parkinson's disease or dementia autoantibodies significantly exceeded (P = 0.001) the level of N2A cell loss induced by an identical concentration of the diabetic autoantibodies in control patients without these two co-morbid neurodegenerative disorders. Co-incubation of diabetic Parkinson's disease and dementia autoantibodies with two-hundred nanomolar concentrations of M100907, a highly selective 5-HT2AR antagonist, completely prevented autoantibody-induced accelerated N2A cell loss and neurite retraction. A higher concentration (500 nM-10μM) of alpha-1 adrenergic, angiotensin II type 1, or endothelin A receptor antagonists did not substantially inhibit autoantibody-induced neuroblastoma cell death or prevent neurite retraction. Antagonists of the inositol triphosphate receptor (2-APB, 50μM), the intracellular calcium chelator (BAPTA-AM, 30 μM) and Y27632 (10 μM), a selective RhoA/Rho kinase inhibitor, each completely blocked acute neurite retraction induced by sixty nanomolar concentrations of diabetic Parkinson's disease autoantibodies. Co-incubation with 2-APB (1-2 μM) for 8 hours' prevented autoantibody-induced N2A cell loss. The highly-purified fraction obtained after Liposorber LA/protein-A affinity chromatography in hypertriglyceridemic diabetic dementia and Parkinson's disease plasmas had apparent MWs > 30 kD, and displayed enhanced N2A toxicity requiring substantially higher concentrations of 5-HT2AR antagonists (M100907, ketanserin, spiperone) to effectively neutralize.

Conclusion: These data suggest increased autoantibodies in older adult diabetes with Parkinson's disease or dementia cause accelerated neuron loss via the 5-hydroxytryptamine 2 receptor coupled to inositol triphosphate receptor-mediated cytosolic Ca2+ release.

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