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1 From the Departments of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences and 3 Physiology, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
| Abstract |
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METHODS. Streptozotocin was used to induce diabetes in rats. To assess cell-to-cell coupling the gap junction-permeant tracer, Neurobiotin, was delivered via patch pipettes into pericytes located on microvessels freshly isolated from the retinas of diabetic and control animals. Subsequently, immunohistochemical methods revealed the extent of the intercellular spread of the tracer. Electrophysiological methods were also used to detect intercellular communication.
RESULTS. In retinal microvessels of control rats, Neurobiotin spread hundreds of micrometers from the tracer-loaded pericytes. However, within days after the onset of diabetes, this cell-to-cell coupling was dramatically reduced. In contrast, microvessels of insulin-treated diabetic rats showed no significant loss of intercellular communication. Consistent with protein kinase C (PKC) playing a role in the diabetes-induced inhibition of gap junction pathways, exposure of microvessels to a PKC activator (phorbol myristate acetate) markedly reduced tracer coupling.
CONCLUSIONS. Within retinal microvessels there is extensive cell-to-cell coupling, which is markedly reduced soon after the onset of streptozotocin-induced diabetes. The closure of gap junction pathways disrupts the multicellular organization of retinal microvessels and may contribute to vascular dysfunction.
| Introduction |
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One mechanism by which cells may interact in the retinal microvasculature is via gap junctions.7 Although definitive evidence of cell-to-cell coupling within retinal microvessels is scant, it seems likely that intercellular pathways exist because ultrastructural studies have demonstrated gap junctions between pericytes and endothelial cells in other parts of the brain.8 9 To establish that retinal microvessels do have intercellular pathways, we loaded pericytes with Neurobiotin (MW, 286 Da), which is a tracer that diffuses through gap junctions. Subsequently, we looked for the intercellular spread of this tracer. In other experiments, analysis of membrane capacitive currents helped to confirm that pericytes are normally coupled to other cells. Because these tracer and electrophysiological assays are not currently feasible in vivo, we used microvessels that were freshly isolated from the retina.10
To assess the effect of diabetes on gap junction pathways within retinal microvessels, we injected rats with streptozotocin (STZ), which destroys insulin-secreting cells of the pancreas and, thereby, creates an experimental model of type 1 diabetes. Here we report that normally there is extensive cell-to-cell coupling within retinal microvessels. This intercellular communication is dramatically reduced soon after the onset of diabetes. However, when diabetic animals are treated with insulin, the gap junction pathways persist, and the multicellular organization of the retinal microvasculature is unaffected.
| Methods |
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Microvessel Isolation
Freshly isolated retinal microvessels were prepared using a
modified "tissue-print" method.10
For each experiment,
retinas from a euthanatized rat were rapidly removed and incubated in
2.5 ml Earles balanced salt solution (Life Technologies, Grand
Island, NY) supplemented with (mM): 0.5 EDTA, 1.5
CaCl2, 1 MgSO4, 20 glucose,
26 sodium bicarbonate, 15 U papain (Worthington Biochemicals, Freehold,
NJ), 0.04% DNase, and 2 mM cysteine for 30 minutes at 30°C, while
95% O25% CO2 was
bubbled through to maintain pH and oxygenation. After transfer to
solution A (140 mM NaCl, 3 mM KCl, 1.8 mM CaCl2,
0.8 mM MgCl2, 10 mM Na-Hepes, 15 mM mannitol, and
5 mM glucose at pH 7.4 with osmolarity adjusted to 310 mosmol
l-1), each retina was briefly sandwiched gently
between two glass coverslips (diameter, 15 mm; Warner Instrument Corp.,
Hamden, CT). Vessels adhered to the coverslip that contacted the
vitreal surface of the retina. We do not know whether the adhering
microvessels are from the inner and/or deeper vascular layers of the
retina. The coverslip containing microvessels was placed in a recording
chamber containing a solution A.
Tracer Labeling
Experiments were performed at room temperature using
microvessels that had been isolated from the retina within 2 hours.
Vessels were examined at x400 magnification with an inverted
microscope equipped with phase-contrast optics. Pericytes were
identified by their characteristic location on the ablumenal wall of
microvessels that had outer diameters of <7 µm.11
A
patch pipette containing 0.5% Neurobiotin (Vector Laboratories,
Burlingame, CA), 25 mM KCl, 105 mM potassium aspartate, 1.5 mM
CaCl2, 2 mM MgCl2, 3 mM
K-EGTA, and 10 mM K-Hepes (pH 7.4, osmolarity
280 mosmol/l) was
mounted in the holder of a Dagan 3900 patch-clamp amplifier (Dagan
Corp., Minneapolis, MN) and positioned onto the soma of a retinal
pericyte located on a freshly isolated retinal microvessel. Application
of gentle suction to the back end of the pipette created a gigaohm
seal. After the patch of cell membrane at the tip of the pipette was
broken by applying progressively increasing amounts of suction via a
pneumatic transducer (Bio-Tek, Winoosik, VT), a voltage of +50 mV was
applied to the pipette for 5 minutes to enhance movement of Neurobiotin
from the pipette into the sampled pericyte. The Neurobiotin-containing
pipette was then removed, and the microvessel was left undisturbed for
40 minutes; the location of the sampled pericyte was documented in a
sketch. In some experiments (see Fig. 4B
), Neurobiotin was loaded using
a similar protocol into vascular smooth muscle cells encircling retinal
vessels, which had outer diameters of 15 to 40 µm. After
approximately 18 hours of fixation at 4°C in a phosphate buffer (PBS)
containing 4% paraformaldehyde, the microvessel-containing coverslip
was washed in PBS, and the endogenous peroxidase activity of the
vessels was blocked by exposure to 0.03% hydrogen peroxide in PBS for
30 minutes. After a 60-minute incubation in 0.5% Triton X-100, the
coverslip was exposed for 40 to 65 hours at 4°C to a horseradish
peroxidasestreptavidin solution (1 µg/ml, RTU; Vector Laboratories)
supplemented with 0.5% Triton X-100. Subsequently, microvessels were
developed for 5 minutes in diaminobenzidine plus nickel (DAB kit;
Vector Laboratories). After the vessels were counterstained with
methylgreen, they were viewed at x100 magnification with a microscope
equipped with bright field optics, and the extent of Neurobiotin
staining was measured.
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Electrophysiology
We used the perforated-patch configuration of the patch-clamp
technique to record the capacitive currents of pericytes located on
microvessels, which had been isolated from the retina within 2 hours.
Analysis of current relaxations evoked by a 10-mV voltage step
permitted the detection of cell-to-cell coupling.12
13
14
In
these experiments, the pipette solution consisted of 50 mM KCl, 65 mM
K2SO4, 6 mM
MgCl2, 10 mM K-Hepes, 240 µg
ml-1 amphotericin B, and 240 µg
ml-1 nystatin at pH 7.4, with the osmolarity
adjusted to 280 mosmol l-1. The pipettes, which
had resistances of approximately 5 M
, were mounted in the holder of
a patch-clamp amplifier (Dagan Corp.) and sealed to the cell bodies of
pericytes. Compensation of the pipette capacitive current was applied
via circuits within the amplifier. As amphotericin/nystatin perforated
the patch, the access resistance decreased to <20 M
for the
pericytes studied. Currents were evoked by a voltage step protocol
controlled by pClamp 8 software (Axon Instruments, Inc., Foster, CA),
filtered at 10 kHz with a four-pole Bessel filter, digitally sampled at
50-µsec intervals using a Digidata 1200B acquisition system (Axon
Instruments), and stored by a Pentium class computer. Curve-fitting
software (Origin 6; Microcal, Northampton, MA) was used to calculate
exponential functions describing the decay of the membrane capacitive
currents.
Chemicals
Chemicals were from Sigma/RBI (St. Louis, MO) unless noted
otherwise.
Statistics
Data are given as means ± SEM. Unless otherwise noted,
probability was evaluated by the Students t-test.
| Results |
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Analyzing the membrane capacitive currents of pericytes provided further evidence for cell-to-cell coupling in retinal microvessels. Under control conditions, the rate of decay of the transient current evoked by a voltage step was poorly fit by a single exponential function (Fig. 3 , left). Rather, this current decayed as the sum of multiple exponential functions of time. A complex rate of decay, such as that observed under control conditions, is predicted for cells that are interconnected in series.13 14 15 However, with exposure of a retinal microvessel to a gap junction uncoupler, the decay of a pericytes capacitive current could then be fit by a single exponential function (Fig. 3 , right) as predicted for a single cell.16 Electrophysiological findings similar to those shown in Figure 3 were made in five pericytes (from 3 rats) that were located on freshly isolated retinal microvessels. Taken together, our tracer studies and electrophysiological experiments suggest that pericyte-containing microvessels of the retina are organized via gap junctions into extensive multicellular networks.
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The question arose as to whether Neurobiotin spreads from a sampled pericyte exclusively to other pericytes or also to endothelial cells. Although a definitive answer may require electron microscopic evaluation, our findings suggest that this tracer does pass from pericytes to the vascular endothelium. This is based on our observation that single pericytes stained with Neurobiotin typically did not completely cover the underlying endothelium (Figs. 1B 1C) . However, when this tracer spread from a sampled pericyte, the entire width of the retinal microvessel was stained (Figs. 1A 4A) . Thus, it appears that Neurobiotin can spread from pericytes to endothelial cells in the retinal microvasculature.
Because microvascular dysfunction occurs early in the course of diabetes,2 3 4 5 6 we hypothesized that the multicellular organization of these vessels may be disrupted in diabetic animals. To test this possibility, we assessed cell-to-cell communication in microvessels freshly isolated from rats made diabetic by STZ. In this experimental model, the spread of Neurobiotin from labeled pericytes was markedly reduced soon after the onset of hyperglycemia (Figs. 5 6A) . In contrast, there was no decrease in the spread of Neurobiotin in animals that received only the buffer that was used to dissolve STZ. Specifically, within 6 days after STZ administration, the distance that the tracer spread decreased by 38% (P = 0.008) to 278 ± 68 µm (n = 8 microvessels from 3 rats). During the second week of diabetes, labeling diminished to 215 ± 31 µm (n = 28 microvessels from 16 rats). This reduction in cell coupling persisted for at least 2 months, at which time Neurobiotin labeled only 132 ± 67 µm (n = 6 microvessels from 3 rats) of the sampled microvessels.
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Finding that diabetes reduced gap junction communication led us to test the possibility that this disruption of microvascular organization could be ameliorated with insulin therapy. We found that the microvessels of STZ-injected rats, which were hyperglycemic for 3 days and then treated for 6 to 8 days with insulin three times per day, showed significantly (P = 0.004) more spread of Neurobiotin than was observed in the microvessels of untreated diabetic animals (Figs. 6 and 7) . With this treatment protocol, tracer coupling within the retinal microvessels was not significantly (P = 0.4) different from in the nondiabetic controls. These results indicate that it is very unlikely that the loss of cell-to-cell coupling in STZ-induced diabetes was due to a direct toxic effect of STZ on the microvessels. Rather, hyperglycemia and/or insulin depletion appear to be the causative factors for a rapid loss of intercellular coupling within the retinal microvasculature.
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| Discussion |
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This is the first demonstration of tracer coupling within a pericyte-containing microvessel. Although not technically feasible at present, it will be important to obtain in vivo confirmation of our tracer and electrophysiological evidence for cell-to-cell coupling within retinal microvessels. Our observation that Neurobiotin spreads from pericytes to other microvascular cells concurs with ultrastructural evidence of gap junctions located between pericytes and endothelial cells in the central nervous system.8 9 Our findings also extend those of Larson and colleagues,18 19 who detected the expression of connexin 43 by cultured pericytes and the junctional transfer of small molecules between brain pericytes and endothelial cells in culture.
Our conclusion that gap junctions extensively couple cells of the retinal microvasculature is similar to inferences concerning the functional linkage of cells within capillaries of skeletal muscle.20 21 22 However, unlike the situation in skeletal muscle,20 21 22 we did not detect intercellular communication between pericyte-containing retinal vessels and those encircled by vascular myocytes. This difference may reflect different functional roles for the microvessels in the retina compared with those in muscle. For example, capillaries are thought to have a passive role in peripheral tissues where precapillary sphincters regulate local perfusion.20 21 22 23 In contrast, because the retinal vasculature lacks precapillary sphincters,24 receives no extrinsic innervation,25 and contains the highest density of contractile pericytes,26 blood flow in the retina may be regulated, at least in part, at the capillary level.27 28 29 Thus, the compartmentalization of gap junction pathways within the retinal vasculature is consistent with the idea that the pericyte-containing microvessels constitute functional units that may actively regulate retinal blood flow.
Our finding that cell-to-cell coupling within the retinal microvasculature is reduced within 6 days after the administration of streptozotocin is one of the earliest functional changes observed in an experimental model of diabetes. This decrease in intercellular communication is unlikely to be due to a direct toxic effect of STZ because cell coupling was normal in STZ-injected rats that were subsequently treated with insulin. Also, the progressive loss of cell coupling during 2 months of diabetes suggests that hyperglycemia and/or insulin deficiency are the causative factors for a breakdown in the multicellular organization of the retinal microvasculature. Clearly, future studies are needed to elucidate the mechanism(s) by which this gap junction communication is compromised early in the course of diabetes.
In addition to the closure of gap junction pathways, a variety of other retinal vascular changes are observed in rats with STZ-induced diabetes. Changes detected by the beginning of the second week include an alteration in the rate of retinal blood flow2 and a breakdown of the bloodretinal barrier.5 Although the interrelationships of these vascular abnormalities are unclear, it may be that the rapid loss of gap junction communication disrupts intercellular pathways that are essential for the maintenance of normal blood flow parameters and barrier properties. In addition, over a longer term, the loss of cell-to-cell communication may metabolically isolate pericytes and, thereby, contribute to their demise early in the course of diabetic retinopathy.
| Acknowledgements |
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| Footnotes |
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Supported by National Institutes of Health Grants EY12505 and EY07003 and the Japanese Ministry of Education. DGP received a Research to Prevent Blindness Senior Scientist Award.
Submitted for publication December 15, 2000; revised February 20, 2001; accepted March 27, 2001.
Commercial relationships policy: N.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page
charge payment. This article must therefore be marked
"advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C.
1734
solely to indicate this fact.
Corresponding author: Donald G. Puro, Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of Michigan, 1000 Wall Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48105. dgpuro{at}umich.edu
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