Insulin enhances vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 expression in human cultured endothelial cells through a pro-atherogenic pathway mediated by p38 mitogen-activated protein-kinase
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2004
abstract:
Aims/hypothesis. Although hyperinsulinaemia in Type
2 diabetes in states of insulin resistance is a risk factor
for atherosclerotic vascular disease, underlying mech-
anisms are poorly understood. We tested the hypothe-
sis that insulin increases monocyte-endothelial inter-
actions, which are implicated in atherosclerosis.
Methods. We treated human umbilical vein endothelial
cells with insulin (10
- 10 to 10
- 7 mol/l) for 0 to 24 h. To
dissect potentially implicated signal transduction path-
ways, we treated endothelial cells with known pharma-
cological inhibitors of two distinct insulin signalling
pathways: the phosphatidylinositol-3 ? -kinase (PI3 ? -ki-
nase) inhibitor wortmannin (3 × 10
- 8 to 10
- 6 mol/l), in-
volved in insulin-induced endothelial nitric oxide syn-
thase stimulation, and the p38 mitogen-activated pro-
tein (p38MAP) kinase inhibitor SB-203580 (10
- 7 to
2 × 10
- 6 mol/l). We measured adhesion molecule ex-
pression by cell surface enzyme immunoassays and
U937 monocytoid cell adhesion in rotational adhesion
assays.
Results. At pathophysiological concentrations (10
- 9 to
10
- 7 mol/l), insulin concentration-dependently induced
vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM)-1 (average
increase: 1.8-fold) peaking at 16 h. By contrast, the ex-
pression of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 and E-se-
lectin were unchanged. The effect on VCAM-1 was
paralleled by increased U937 cell adhesion. In the ab-
sence of cytotoxicity, wortmannin significantly poten-
tiated the effect of insulin alone on VCAM-1 surface
expression and monocytoid cell adhesion, whereas SB-
203580 (10
- 6 mol/l) completely abolished such effects.
Conclusions/interpretation. These observations indi-
cate that insulin promotes VCAM-1 expression in en-
dothelial cells through a p38MAP-kinase pathway, am-
plified by the PI3 ? -kinase blockage. This could con-
tribute to explaining the increased atherosclerosis oc-
curring in subjects with hyperinsulinaemia, or in states
of insulin resistance, which feature a defective PI3 ? -ki-
nase pathway. [Diabetologia (2004) 47:532-536]
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Insulin; Atherosclerosis; Adhesion molecules
List of contributors:
Massaro, Marika
Published in: