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1From the Department of Ophthalmology, University Hospital Maastricht, Maastricht, The Netherlands; the 2Eye Research Institute, Oakland University, Rochester, Michigan; and the 3Departments of Anatomy and Cell Biology and 4Ophthalmology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan.
| Abstract |
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METHODS. In freshly excised age-matched control and diabetic rat retinas, measurements were made of the NAD+ and NADH content as well as a surrogate marker of NAD+-to-NADH ratios obtained from lactate and pyruvate levels. In addition, the effect of various hyperglycemic levels was assessed from measurements of retinal lactate and pyruvate concentrations and the rate of lactic acid production in vitro (isolated rat retinas, monolayer cultures of human retinal pigment epithelial cells, and rabbit lens epithelial cells).
RESULTS. No significant differences (P > 0.05) were found between control and diabetic tissues in their amount of total NAD+ and NADH/retina, and the ratio of NAD+ to NADH, or in their content of lactate, pyruvate, and adenosine triphosphate (ATP) or in the ratio of lactate to pyruvate. The content of lactate and pyruvate in retinas incubated for 2 hours in media containing 10 or 30 mM glucose was the same as found in fresh tissues, but the levels of these metabolites in retinas incubated in media containing 5 mM glucose declined in comparison to the fresh values. There were no significant differences in lactate content in cultured retinal and lens cells that were exposed to 5 or 30 mM glucose-containing media.
DISCUSSION. The present results do not support the hyperglycemic pseudohypoxia hypothesis of diabetic retinopathy.
| Materials and Methods |
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Control and Diabetic Rats
Separate groups of control (C) Sprague-Dawley rats, and 6-month-old diabetic (D) Sprague-Dawley rats were studied. Diabetes was induced in 200-g Sprague-Dawley rats after an overnight fast with an intraperitoneal injection of streptozotocin (55 mg/kg) within 5 minutes of its preparation in 0.01 M citrate buffer (pH 4.5). Diabetes was verified 3 days later by the presence of plasma hyperglycemia (
400 mg/dL) and elevated urine volume (>60 mL/d) in nonfasted rats. Subtherapeutic levels of insulin (02 U of neutral protamine Hagedorn [NPH] insulin administered subcutaneously daily) were administered to maintain a level of hyperglycemia of 400 to 550 mg/dL. Only rats with this history of hyperglycemia were studied. After induction of diabetes, all animals had free access to food and water and were maintained in a 14-hour light-10-hour dark cycle. Glycated hemoglobin (GHb) levels were determined by affinity chromatography, as previously described.16 The 6-month control level of glycated hemoglobin was 4.1% ± 0.6% (n = 10), and the 6-month diabetic level was 9.2% ± 1.8% (n = 9).
Tissue and Cell Cultures
After the rats were killed by CO2 inhalation or decapitation (without CO2), each retina was isolated rapidly (within 5 seconds) from other ocular tissues by methods that have been described in detail earlier.17 18 Retinas were placed in a Petri dish containing ice-cold control incubation medium, and adherent vitreous humor was carefully removed. The composition of the control medium was as follows (mM): 130 NaCl, 5 KCl, 25 NaHCO3, 0.5 MgSO4, 5 D-glucose, and 2 CaCl2. The pH was 7.4, and the osmolarity was approximately 310 mOsM. All substitutions were made iso-osmotically. The O2 tension in the medium was 95%, and the CO2 tension was 5%. Retinas were incubated in 10 mL of media in 25 mL Erlenmeyer flasks, either individually (one retina per 10 mL) or in groups of up to four retinas per flask, containing 5, 10, or 30 mM D-glucose. Incubations lasted for 2 hours at 37°C. For the anaerobic condition, media were gassed with a mixture containing 95% N2 and 5% CO2 before the retinas were added. Continuous gassing of the air space in the flask above the solution also continued throughout the period of incubation, thus ensuring a high partial pressure of oxygen or nitrogen.
Human retinal pigment epithelial (hRPE) cells were obtained from eyes obtained postmortem from the Michigan Eye Bank. The hRPE cell cultures were produced as described earlier.19 Cells were grown in Dulbeccos modified Eagles Medium (DMEM cat. no. 31600; Invitrogen-Gibco, Grand Island, NY) supplemented with 15% fetal bovine serum, amphotericin B (250 µg/mL), 250 µg/mL sodium desoxycholate as a solubilizer (Invitrogen-Gibco), and 0.5% gentamicin.
Rabbit lens epithelial cells (LECs)20 were grown in minimal essential Eagles medium (M0643; Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO), supplemented with 8% rabbit serum and 0.5% gentamicin. Cell cultures were grown to confluence in 150-mm dishes in a humidified atmosphere of air plus 5% CO2 at 37°C. Media were changed every 3 days. At confluence, cells (both hRPE and LECs) were split into 60-mm dishes. After 24 hours, confluent cell cultures were washed three times in serum-free minimum essential medium (MEM). Cell cultures were then incubated for 2 hours at 37°C in 4 mL of serum-free medium, containing 5 or 30 mM D-glucose. For the anaerobic condition, 0.01 mM antimycin A was added to the incubation media to block mitochondrial activity.21
Biochemical Measurements
For extraction of NAD+, one rat retina was homogenized in 0.25 mL of 0.23 M KH2PO4 on ice.22 The homogenate was exposed for 1 minute in a boiling-water bath, chilled, neutralized with an equal volume of 0.2 M KOH and centrifuged at 20,000g. The supernatant was diluted 1:4 with distilled water and 0.1 mL of the diluted sample was assayed. For extraction of NADH, one rat retina was homogenized in 0.25 mL of 0.2 M KOH.22 After boiling for 1 minute and cooling, the homogenate was neutralized with 0.25 mL of 0.2 M K2PO4 and then centrifuged at 20,000g. The supernatant was diluted 1:2 with 0.01 M NaPO4 (pH 7.4). Assay for NADH was performed with 0.1 mL of diluted sample. For measurement of the content of the pyridine nucleotides in the samples, the reaction mixture consisted of thiazolyl blue (MTT), bicine and phanazine ethosulfate, ethanol, and alcohol dehydrogenase. The reaction sequence includes the reduction of MTT to the corresponding formazan which absorbs maximally at 570 nm. Oxidized coenzyme is cycled back to the reduced form by the dehydrogenase and its substrate. The rate of increase in absorbance is proportional to the concentration of the coenzyme in the assay mixture. The assay was performed in a 1-mL cuvette at room temperature, using a recording spectrophotometer (Gilford model 250; Nova Biotech, El Cajon, CA). Each response was recorded as the increase in absorbance at 570 nm per 3 minutes over the blank, and rates were compared to standards for each pyridine nucleotide. For the blank, a neutralized solution of KOH-KH2PO4 was used in place of the cell extract.
The content of lactic acid was measured in the media at timed intervals during the incubations (to obtain an estimate of the rate of glycolysis) and in cell extracts of retinas and cultured cells. Aliquots (typically, 0.050.2 mL) of the incubation media were withdrawn at 1 and 2 hours during the experiments on tissues and cells. Lactate in the media was measured with a lactic acid dehydrogenase-based commercial kit (826-UV; Sigma-Aldrich) that couples lactate to the reduction of nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide (NAD), as monitored on a spectrophotometer at 340 nm. For measurement of the content of lactate in a single isolated rat retina, a retina was removed from the incubation flask, rinsed in ice-cold saline and homogenized in 0.25 mL of 10% perchloric acid (PCA). The homogenate was centrifuged in the cold for 10 minutes at 20,000g. The PCA supernatant (0.2 mL) was diluted 1:1 with 2 M KHCO3 and the neutralized suspension was centrifuged for 5 minutes in the cold at 20,000g to obtain a clear supernatant. The content of retinal lactate was measured using a 0.025-mL aliquot of the neutralized supernatant in a spectrofluorophotometer (RF-5000; Shimadzu, Columbia, MD) with ex = 340 nm; em = 460 nm. The content of lactate in cultured hRPE and LECs was also measured on neutralized PCA extracts, as described earlier. In the case of the cells, three confluent dishes were collected together in 0.5 mL of 10% PCA, and 0.4 mL of the neutralized PCA/KHCO3 supernatants was used in the assays. Measurements of the content of pyruvate in isolated rat retinas were performed with the spectrofluorophotometer. Because of the low content of pyruvate in a rat retina, it was necessary to homogenize four retinas together in 0.25 mL of 10% PCA. After centrifugation, the PCA supernatant (0.2 mL) was diluted 1:1 with 2 M KHCO3, and the neutralized suspension was centrifuged for 5 minutes in the cold at 20,000g to obtain a clear supernatant. The content of retinal pyruvate was measured using a 0.25-mL aliquot. These aliquots of pooled retinas were also used for measuring lactate content, but only a 0.01-mL sample was used. In this way, data for lactate and pyruvate could be obtained from the same pooled retinas. Despite our best efforts, measurements of the content of pyruvate in pooled dishes of confluent hRPE and LECs remained below the detection limits of the fluorometer. The standard curves revealed that 1 nmol of pyruvate or lactate was the lowest amount that could be reliably detected in an individual assay (data not shown). For determination of both lactate and pyruvate, samples were incubated in the appropriate enzyme mixture containing cofactors (NAD+ or NADH) for 5 minutes at room temperature at which time the reactions had reached completion. Each sample was read against a lactate or pyruvate standard curve (which was run at the start of every experiment) and total nanomoles of lactate or pyruvate per retina or per 106 cells were calculated. Results are expressed as nanomoles per retina or nanomoles per 106 cells. To convert data on a per retina basis to a per-milligram-protein basis, we considered that averaged total homogenate protein per one rat retina was 1.1 mg and averaged cytosolic protein (equivalent to the 20,000g supernatant obtained after homogenization in phosphate buffer) was 0.33 mg. The biochemical data in the tables are presented as the mean ± SD. Each mean value represents the number of independent measurements on single or pooled retinas. Data were analyzed by Students paired t-test, and P
0.05 was considered to be statistically significant.
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) content was measured in freshly excised retinas after homogenization of a single retina (or pooled retinas) in 0.25 mL 5% perchloric acid and centrifugation at 20,000g for 10 minutes.8 ATP was measured on diluted cell extracts using a luminometer (Turner Systems, Sunnyvale, CA). Sample values were compared against a standard curve for each experiment.
The activity of aldose reductase (AR) was determined in 20,000g supernatants of fresh rat retinas or cultured hRPE and LECs by observing the change in absorbance at 340 nm of NADPH at room temperature, as described previously.8 Substrates tested included 1 mM D,L-glyceraldehyde and 30 mM glucose. Our previous study8 failed to detect activity of aldose reductase when a single rat retina was homogenized in 0.5 mL of 0.1 M PO4 buffer (pH 6.3) and 0.2 to 0.4 mL samples were tested. In the present study, two rat retinas were homogenized in 0.5 mL of phosphate buffer, and 0.4 mL of the supernatant was tested. In this way, we effectively used the equivalent of 1.6 rat retinas per assay. For measurements of aldose reductase activity in cultured cells, three dishes of confluent cells were scraped and collected into a total volume of 0.5 mL of 0.1 M PO4. The cells were centrifuged at 20,000g for 15 minutes, and 0.4-mL samples of the supernatants were assayed for activity. Activity of lactic acid dehydrogenase (LDH) was measured in cell extracts of rat retinas and cultured cells, as previously described.19 Typically, only 5 or 10 µL of the supernatants was needed for measurement of LDH activity.
| Results |
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0.05). In contrast, when retinas were incubated for 2 hours in media containing either 10 or 30 mM glucose, the lactate and pyruvate were maintained at levels similar to their respective content in fresh tissues (e.g., 81 and 86 nmol lactate/retina and 1.5 and 1.8 nmol pyruvate/retina; P > 0.05).
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Table 4 provides information about the content of lactate and pyruvate in rat retinas incubated for 2 hours under anaerobic conditions (95% N2 and 5% CO2). As expected, anoxia led to increases in lactate content in retinas incubated in 5, 10, and 30 mM glucose in comparison to their respective aerobic values (compare data in Table 4 , left column with data in Table 3 , left column). Anaerobic lactate content was similar (P > 0.05) in retinas incubated with either 10 or 30 mM glucose (i.e., 138 vs. 129 nmol/retina). The anaerobic levels of pyruvate were not significantly different (P > 0.05) from the aerobic values for the three concentrations of glucose. Anaerobic lactate production was higher (P < 0.05) than aerobic lactate production for each glucose concentration tested. Relative to the rate of anaerobic lactate production in retinas incubated in media containing 5 mM glucose, increasing the concentration of glucose to 10 and 30 mM led to increases (P < 0.05) in lactate production of 30% to 33%, with maximum lactate production attained with 10 mM glucose.
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| Discussion |
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We also tested the pseudohypoxia hyperglycemia hypothesis by examining the levels of lactate, pyruvate, and ATP in control and diabetic retinas and found no differences. Previous studies of the lactate and pyruvate content in control and diabetic retinas have yielded conflicting results. Heath et al.24 reported no difference in the pyruvate content between control and diabetic retinas, whereas retinal lactate content increased in starch-fed but not in sucrose-fed diabetic rats. Salceda et al.25 reported early increases (714 days) in lactate and pyruvate content in retinas after administration of streptozotocin to rats. However, by 45 days into the diabetic state, there was no significant difference in lactate content between control and diabetic retinas, whereas the pyruvate content in diabetic retinas declined to a value below the control level. Obrosova et al.26 found that retinal lactate levels were not increased in 3- to 6-week diabetic rats in comparison to control animals, but pyruvate levels were lower than in the control. More recently, Ola et al.9 reported no differences in the content of lactate and pyruvate between control rat retinas and 3-week/3-month diabetic rats, a result similar to that found in the longer-term diabetic rat retinas in the present study (see Table 1 ). These considerations support our data showing that the lactate-to-pyruvate ratio in rat retinas is not elevated by diabetes.
The experimental evidence motivating the present work and that led to the hypothesis that an elevation of glucose concentration causes a hypoxia-like redox imbalance, termed "hyperglycemic pseudohypoxia," was originally obtained after short-term incubations (2 hours) of isolated rat retinas (obtained from nondiabetic animals) in media containing either 5 or 30 mM glucose.2 3 The fundamental finding at the core of this hypothesis is that incubation of retinas in media containing 30 mM glucose leads to an increase in the lactate-to-pyruvate ratio relative to the ratio found in retinas incubated with 5 mM glucose. On a quantitative basis, the increase in lactate in retinas incubated with 30 mM glucose amounted to approximately 100 nmol/retina, whereas the increase in pyruvate amounted to only 1 to 2 nmol/retina. That hyperglycemia and hypoxia each cause an increase in the lactate-to-pyruvate ratio led Williamson et al.2 to link these effects into a common hypothesis that diabetic complications are related to a hypoxia-like redox imbalance caused by increased oxidation of sorbitol to fructose by the NAD+-dependent sorbitol dehydrogenase.
In this study, our in vitro results (e.g., lactate and pyruvate content, and the lactate-to-pyruvate ratio in Table 3 ) are quite similar to those of Williamson et al. in their 19952 and 20043 papers; but, when these data are compared with those obtained in freshly excised retinas, a different picture emerges. Although hyperglycemia increased the levels of lactate and pyruvate in incubated rat retinas, the maximum effect was observed with 10 mM glucose. A similar pattern of changes in the content of lactate and pyruvate was observed in retinas incubated in nitrogenated media. Anoxia increased the levels of lactate and pyruvate and the lactate-to-pyruvate ratio, and the effects were maximal in the presence of 10 mM glucose (see Table 4 ).
One concern is whether the lactate levels measured in fresh tissues after CO2 narcosis are indicative of a chronic hypoxic state, and thus the higher fresh values measured relative to those found after a 2-hour incubation in media containing 5 mM glucose may simply reflect a distortion of the "true" in vivo level. If this were the case, then incubations of retinas in media containing the higher glucose concentrations (10 and 30 mM) would simulate hypoxia, even in the presence of a high oxygen tension. Our retinal lactate data in rats killed by decapitation without any anesthesia, and the data from other laboratories,3 26 27 do not support this possibility. In addition, in our surgical technique for isolation of a rat retina, only approximately 5 seconds elapsed between the time of decapitation or CO2 narcosis and the removal and placement of the tissue into ice-cold media. Given the similarity of the starting content of lactate in retinas isolated under these two different conditions of death and the short time needed for the surgical isolation of a rat retina, it seems unlikely that the fresh retinas are hypoxic. That our averaged value for ATP content in freshly excised rat retinas is similar to that reported for rat retinas dissected from frozen in situ tissue using a funnel freezing procedure28 lends support to our contention that our fresh retinas are not hypoxic.
It appears then that the use of 10 mM glucose, but not 5 mM glucose, is sufficient to preserve the levels of lactate and pyruvate in incubated rat retinas. Although this result may appear surprising, it should be noted that the plasma glucose concentration measured under normoglycemic conditions in rat blood is 11 to 12 mM.28 29 This result supports an earlier suggestion from our laboratory8 that "raising the glucose concentration in the bathing medium (from 5 to 10 mM) surrounding normal isolated rat retinas enhances its rate of diffusion from the choroidal and vitreal surfaces to the center of the 200 micron thick tissue." This suggestion is further supported by the present findings showing that the rates of aerobic and anaerobic lactic acid production are also maximal with 10 mM glucose. An important point from the present in vitro incubations is to include measurements of metabolites in freshly excised tissues to establish the t = 0 baseline (i.e., a value as close as possible to what is present in vivo that can be compared with values obtained during the ongoing incubations). Although 5 mM glucose is commonly used in solutions used in in vitro studies of tissues and cultured cells, it is not always the case that this concentration is sufficient to support optimal metabolic activities. Our findings that incubation of retinas in media containing 5 mM glucose lowers the levels of lactate and pyruvate, but that 10 mM glucose maintains their levels in comparison to their respective values in freshly excised retinas reinforce this point. A similar situation is seen with oxygen, because equilibration of incubation media bathing an isolated rat retina with 20% oxygen (a partial pressure slightly greater plasma PO2) is not sufficient to sustain a maximal rate of respiration in this tissue.8
To provide an additional test of the role of diffusion as an explanation for the differences in results obtained in rat retinas incubated in media containing 5 or 10 mM glucose, we examined the effects of varying the concentration of glucose in media bathing monolayer cultures of hRPE and LEC, two cell types that possess AR activity, though this activity was several orders of magnitude lower than the activity of LDH (see the Results section). We reasoned that the use of monolayer cultures would eliminate to a large degree diffusion limitations for the availability of glucose in these cell models. The results (see Table 5 ) show unequivocally that there are no significant differences in lactate content and lactate production in cultured cells incubated with either 5 or 30 mM glucose.
In summary, this study raises the possibility that the original in vitro data2 suggesting the hyperglycemic pseudohypoxia hypothesis in retina were based on a glucose concentration in the incubation media that was too low to support metabolism. After repeating the in vitro experiments with a more appropriate level of glucose in the incubation media and examining in vivo data from normoglycemic and diabetic rat retinas, we8 and other investigators4 5 6 7 9 do not find support for this hypothesis as contributing to the development of diabetic abnormalities in the retina.
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Submitted for publication January 24, 2006; revised February 23, 2006; accepted April 17, 2006.
Disclosure: R.M.H. Diederen, None; C.A. Starnes, None; B.A. Berkowitz, None; B.S. Winkler, None
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: Barry S. Winkler, Eye Research Institute, Oakland University, Rochester, MI 48309; winkler{at}oakland.edu.
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