Intravital assessment of precapillary pulmonary arterioles of type 1 diabetic mice shows oxidative damage and increased tone in response to NOS inhibition

型糖尿病小鼠毛细血管前肺小动脉的活体评估表明,氧化损伤和 NOS 抑制引起的张力增加

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作者:Andrew M Roberts, Nayeem Z Moulana, Rekha Jagadapillai, Lu Cai, Evelyne Gozal

Abstract

Microvascular dilation, important for peripheral tissue glucose distribution, also modulates alveolar perfusion and is inhibited by loss of bioavailable nitric oxide (NO) in diabetes mellitus (DM). We hypothesized that DM-induced oxidative stress decreases bioavailable NO and pulmonary precapillary arteriolar diameter, causing endothelial injury. We examined subpleural pulmonary arterioles after acute NO synthase (NOS) inhibition with NG-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (l-NAME) in streptozotocin (STZ)- and saline (CTRL)-treated C57BL/6J mice. Microvascular changes were assessed by intravital microscopy in the right lung of anesthetized mice with open chest and ventilated lungs. Arteriolar tone in pulmonary arterioles (27.2-48.7 µm diameter) increased in CTRL mice (18.0 ± 11% constriction, P = 0.034, n = 5) but decreased in STZ mice (13.6 ± 7.5% dilation, P = 0.009, n = 5) after l-NAME. Lung tissue dihydroethidium (DHE) fluorescence (superoxide), inducible NOS expression, and protein nitrosylation (3-nitrotyrosine) increased in STZ mice and correlated with increased glucose levels (103.8 ± 8.8 mg/dL). Fluorescently labeled fibrinogen administration and fibrinogen immunostaining showed fibrinogen adhesion, indicating endothelial injury in STZ mice. In CTRL mice, vasoconstriction to l-NAME was likely due to the loss of bioavailable NO. Vasodilation in STZ mice may be due to decreased formation of a vasoconstrictor or emergence of a vasodilator. These findings provide novel evidence that DM targets the pulmonary microcirculation and that decreased NO bioavailability and increased precapillary arteriolar tone could potentially lead to ventilation-perfusion abnormalities, exacerbating systemic DM complications.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Diabetes pulmonary and microvascular consequences are well recognized but have not been characterized. We assessed lung microvascular changes in a live anesthetized mouse model of type 1 diabetes, using a novel intravital microscopy technique. Our results show new evidence that a diabetes-induced decrease in lung nitric oxide bioavailability underlies oxidative damage, enhanced platelet activation, and endothelial injury causing pulmonary microvascular dysfunction and altered vasoreactivity. These findings could provide novel strategies to prevent or reverse diabetes systemic consequences.

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