Small molecular weight G-protein, H-Ras, and retinal endothelial cell apoptosis in diabetes
- PMID: 16924412
- DOI: 10.1007/s11010-006-9299-z
Small molecular weight G-protein, H-Ras, and retinal endothelial cell apoptosis in diabetes
Abstract
We have demonstrated that the expressions of small molecular weight G-protein, H-Ras, and its effector protein, Raf-1, are increased in the retina in diabetes, and the specific inhibitors of Ras function inhibit glucose-induced apoptosis of retinal capillary cells. This study is to examine the contributory roles for H-Ras in glucose-induced apoptosis of retinal endothelial cells by genetic manipulation of functionally active H-Ras levels. Bovine retinal endothelial cells were transfected with the plasmids of either wild type (WT), constitutively active (V12) or dominant-negative (N17) H-Ras. Glucose-induced increase in apoptosis, nitric oxide (NO) levels and activation of NF-kappaB and caspase-3 were determined in these genetically manipulated cells. Exposure of bovine retinal endothelial cells to 20 mM glucose significantly increased H-Ras activation as determined by Raf-1 binding assay. Overexpression of V12 in the endothelial cells further increased their glucose-induced apoptosis by 40%, NO levels by about 50%, and activated NF-kappaB and caspase-3 by about 30-40% compared to the untransfected cells incubated in 20 mM glucose. In contrast, overexpression of the inactive mutant, N17, inhibited glucose-mediated increases in apoptotic cell death, NO levels and NF-kappaB and caspase-3 activation; the values were significantly different (p < 0.02) compared to those obtained from the untransfected cells incubated under similar conditions. Our findings demonstrate that H-Ras activation is important in the activation of the specific signaling events leading to the accelerated retinal capillary cell apoptosis in hyperglycemic conditions, suggesting the possible use of H-Ras inhibitors to inhibit the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy.
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