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Elevated plasma prostaglandis and acetylated histone in monocytes in type 1 diabetes patients

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 05:36 authored by Suzi Chen, A Jenkins, Henryk Majewski
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Inflammation is implicated in diabetes and cyclooxygenase (COX) is involved in vascular inflammatory processes, participating in both atherosclerosis and thrombosis. The aims were to determine whether levels of monocyte COX and plasma COX metabolites are increased in Type 1 diabetic patients and to determine whether these could be linked to histone hyperacetylation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Monocytes from 19 Type 1 diabetic and 39 non-diabetic control subjects were probed for COX and acetylated histone H4 proteins by immunoblotting. Plasma COX metabolite levels [thromboxane B(2) (TXB(2)) and prostaglandin E(2) (PGE(2))] were determined by enzyme immunoassay. RESULTS: Monocyte COX-2 expression was significantly up-regulated (1.3-fold) in diabetic relative to the non-diabetic control subjects and plasma PGE(2) was markedly elevated (2.7-fold). In diabetic subjects, monocyte acetylated histone H4 levels were significantly elevated; sub-group analysis indicated that the increased histone acetylation was found only in the complication-free group. CONCLUSIONS: Results support increased inflammatory activity in Type 1 diabetes that involves COX-2 and increased prostaglandin production, which may predispose patients to cardiovascular events. The observation of elevated histone acetylation only in complication-free diabetic subjects suggests that this may be a protective mechanism. This merits further investigation as histone hyperacetylation has been associated with reduced expression of factors involved in vascular injury and remodelling.

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1111/j.1464-5491.2008.02658.x
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 07423071

Journal

Diabetic medicine

Volume

26

Start page

182

End page

186

Total pages

5

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright 2009 Diabetes UK, Diabetic Medicine

Former Identifier

2006009745

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2010-12-22

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