Ager Deletion Enhances Ischemic Muscle Inflammation, Angiogenesis, and Blood Flow Recovery in Diabetic Mice

Author:

López-Díez Raquel1,Shen Xiaoping1,Daffu Gurdip1,Khursheed Md1,Hu Jiyuan1,Song Fei1,Rosario Rosa1,Xu Yunlu1,Li Qing1,Xi Xiangmei1,Zou Yu Shan1,Li Huilin1,Schmidt Ann Marie1,Yan Shi Fang1

Affiliation:

1. From the Diabetes Research Program, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Department of Medicine (R.L.D., X.S., G.D., M.K., F.S., R.R., Y.X., Q.L., X.X., Y.S.Z., A.M.S., S.F.Y.), Department of Population Health (J.H., H.L.), and Department of Environmental Science (H.L.), New York University School of Medicine, New York.

Abstract

Objective— Diabetic subjects are at higher risk of ischemic peripheral vascular disease. We tested the hypothesis that advanced glycation end products (AGEs) and their receptor (RAGE) block angiogenesis and blood flow recovery after hindlimb ischemia induced by femoral artery ligation through modulation of immune/inflammatory mechanisms. Approach and Results— Wild-type mice rendered diabetic with streptozotocin and subjected to unilateral femoral artery ligation displayed increased accumulation and expression of AGEs and RAGE in ischemic muscle. In diabetic wild-type mice, femoral artery ligation attenuated angiogenesis and impaired blood flow recovery, in parallel with reduced macrophage content in ischemic muscle and suppression of early inflammatory gene expression, including Ccl2 (chemokine [C-C motif] ligand-2) and Egr1 (early growth response gene-1) versus nondiabetic mice. Deletion of Ager (gene encoding RAGE) or transgenic expression of Glo1 (reduces AGEs) restored adaptive inflammation, angiogenesis, and blood flow recovery in diabetic mice. In diabetes mellitus, deletion of Ager increased circulating Ly6C hi monocytes and augmented macrophage infiltration into ischemic muscle tissue after femoral artery ligation. In vitro, macrophages grown in high glucose display inflammation that is skewed to expression of tissue damage versus tissue repair gene expression. Further, macrophages grown in high versus low glucose demonstrate blunted macrophage–endothelial cell interactions. In both settings, these adverse effects of high glucose were reversed by Ager deletion in macrophages. Conclusions— These findings indicate that RAGE attenuates adaptive inflammation in hindlimb ischemia; underscore microenvironment-specific functions for RAGE in inflammation in tissue repair versus damage; and illustrate that AGE/RAGE antagonism may fill a critical gap in diabetic peripheral vascular disease.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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