Redox Biology (May 2018)

Short-term sustained hyperglycaemia fosters an archetypal senescence-associated secretory phenotype in endothelial cells and macrophages

  • Francesco Prattichizzo,
  • Valeria De Nigris,
  • Elettra Mancuso,
  • Rosangela Spiga,
  • Angelica Giuliani,
  • Giulia Matacchione,
  • Raffaella Lazzarini,
  • Fiorella Marcheselli,
  • Rina Recchioni,
  • Roberto Testa,
  • Lucia La Sala,
  • Maria Rita Rippo,
  • Antonio Domenico Procopio,
  • Fabiola Olivieri,
  • Antonio Ceriello

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2017.12.001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. C
pp. 170 – 181

Abstract

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Diabetic status is characterized by chronic low-grade inflammation and an increased burden of senescent cells. Recently, the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) has been suggested as a possible source of inflammatory factors in obesity-induced type 2 diabetes. However, while senescence is a known consequence of hyperglycaemia, evidences of SASP as a result of the glycaemic insult are missing. In addition, few data are available regarding which cell types are the main SASP-spreading cells in vivo. Adopting a four-pronged approach we demonstrated that: i) an archetypal SASP response that was at least partly attributable to endothelial cells and macrophages is induced in mouse kidney after in vivo exposure to sustained hyperglycaemia; ii) reproducing a similar condition in vitro in endothelial cells and macrophages, hyperglycaemic stimulus largely phenocopies the SASP acquired during replicative senescence; iii) in endothelial cells, hyperglycaemia-induced senescence and SASP could be prevented by SOD-1 overexpression; and iiii) ex vivo circulating angiogenic cells derived from peripheral blood mononuclear cells from diabetic patients displayed features consistent with the SASP. Overall, the present findings document a direct link between hyperglycaemia and the SASP in endothelial cells and macrophages, making the SASP a highly likely contributor to the fuelling of low-grade inflammation in diabetes.

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