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Early disruption of nerve mitochondrial and myelin lipid homeostasis in obesity-induced diabetes
Juan P. Palavicini, … , Jeffrey L. Dupree, Xianlin Han
Juan P. Palavicini, … , Jeffrey L. Dupree, Xianlin Han
Published November 5, 2020
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2020;5(21):e137286. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.137286.
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Research Article Metabolism Neuroscience

Early disruption of nerve mitochondrial and myelin lipid homeostasis in obesity-induced diabetes

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Abstract

Diabetic neuropathy is a major complication of diabetes. Current treatment options alleviate pain but do not stop the progression of the disease. At present, there are no approved disease-modifying therapies. Thus, developing more effective therapies remains a major unmet medical need. Seeking to better understand the molecular mechanisms driving peripheral neuropathy, as well as other neurological complications associated with diabetes, we performed spatiotemporal lipidomics, biochemical, ultrastructural, and physiological studies on PNS and CNS tissue from multiple diabetic preclinical models. We unraveled potentially novel molecular fingerprints underlying nerve damage in obesity-induced diabetes, including an early loss of nerve mitochondrial (cardiolipin) and myelin signature (galactosylceramide, sulfatide, and plasmalogen phosphatidylethanolamine) lipids that preceded mitochondrial, myelin, and axonal structural/functional defects; started in the PNS; and progressed to the CNS at advanced diabetic stages. Mechanistically, we provided substantial evidence indicating that these nerve mitochondrial/myelin lipid abnormalities are (surprisingly) not driven by hyperglycemia, dysinsulinemia, or insulin resistance, but rather associate with obesity/hyperlipidemia. Importantly, our findings have major clinical implications as they open the door to novel lipid-based biomarkers to diagnose and distinguish different subtypes of diabetic neuropathy (obese vs. nonobese diabetics), as well as to lipid-lowering therapeutic strategies for treatment of obesity/diabetes-associated neurological complications and for glycemic control.

Authors

Juan P. Palavicini, Juan Chen, Chunyan Wang, Jianing Wang, Chao Qin, Eric Baeuerle, Xinming Wang, Jung A. Woo, David E. Kang, Nicolas Musi, Jeffrey L. Dupree, Xianlin Han

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Figure 4

Disruption of myelin but not axonal PNS nerve ultrastructure in obese diabetic mice.

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Disruption of myelin but not axonal PNS nerve ultrastructure in obese di...
Representative electron microscope (EM) cross-sectional images from the sciatic nerve (A) and spinal cord (B) (scale bars: 5 μm and 2 μm, respectively) of 4-month-old WT and db/db male mice. Scatter plots displaying myelin thickness of individual myelinated axons as a function of their respective average axon diameter (caliber) within the sciatic nerve (C) and spinal cord (E) in WT (open shapes and lines) and db/db (dotted shapes and broken lines) mice. Linear regression curves fitting the axonal data points (sciatic nerve n = ~100 axons/mice, spinal cord n = ~50 axons/mice) are displayed for each animal. (D) Sciatic nerve axons were categorized according to caliber; data are shown as the mean ± SEM of n = 3 male mice/genotype/tissue for all panels. Axon categories were compared between genotypes using 2-way ANOVA and Holm-Šidák multiple comparisons tests.

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