The incidence of diabetes mellitus has increased dramatically over the past two to three decades. According to the International Diabetes Federation Diabetes Atlas, 415 million people worldwide had diabetes in 2015, and this number is expected to grow by 5% annually, predominantly as a result of increasing prevalence of type 2 diabetes. Furthermore, an estimated 100 million Europeans and 80 million Americans have impaired glucose tolerance or prediabetes. Few people die from acute diabetes in countries with comprehensive health care systems, but the disease is inflicting a huge medical, social and economic burden on society owing to the need for lifelong treatment of its systemic consequences and the insidious development of multi-organ damage.Peripheral neuropathy (BOXES 1,2) is a common but often neglected complication of long-term diabetes, and the lack of treatment options reflects an incomplete understanding of the pathogenic mechanisms. Hyperglycaemia is generally accepted as the primary pathogenic insult in type 1 and type 2 diabetic neuropathy, although roles are emerging for other factors, such as impaired insulin signalling, hypertension and dyslipidaemia (particularly for type 2 diabetes), which might precede overt hyperglycaemia 1 . Many preclinical studies, and occasional clinical studies, have indicated that diabetic neuropathy -like diabetic nephropathy and retinopathy -results from microvascular disease, with a focus on axonal degeneration as a consequence of ischaemia and/or hypoxia. This mechanism, however, is likely to be only one aspect of a more complex pathogenesis.The earliest descriptions of pathology in diabetic neuropathy indicated that Schwannopathy accompanied axonal degeneration. The majority of clinical and basic research in diabetic neuropathy since then has focused on the effects on neurons. However, accumulating data from research into the development and regeneration of the PNS has identified Schwann cells as equally indispensable components that maintain neuronal structure and function, nourish axons, and promote survival and growth upon injury. The early reports from 1979 that demonstrated morphological changes in Schwann cells in human diabetic neuropathy 2 are now supported by an increased awareness of molecular alterations in Schwann cells during diabetes 3 . Schwann cells express a wide range of receptors and, when they sense insults or danger signals, they upregulate synthesis and secretion of factors that stimulate neuroprotection, regrowth and remyelination, or factors that aggravate disease phenotypes 4 . The most recent studies have demonstrated that Schwann cells regulate many aspects of axonal function, so that disruption of their metabolism by diabetes results in the accumulation of neurotoxic intermediates and compromises production of neuronal support factors, contributing to axonal degeneration, endothelial dysfunction and diabetic neuropathy. Abstract | The prevalence of diabetes worldwide is at pandemic levels, with the number of patients increasing by 5% annu...
The incidence of diabetes mellitus is approaching global epidemic proportions and should be considered a major health-care problem of modern societies in the twenty-first century. Diabetic neuropathy is a common chronic complication of diabetes and, although an adequate glycemic control can reduce the frequency of diabetic neuropathy in type 1 diabetes, the majority of type 2 diabetic patients will develop this complication. The underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms are still poorly understood, preventing the development of effective treatment strategies. However, accumulating evidence suggests that breakdown of the blood-nerve barrier (BNB) plays a pivotal pathophysiological role in diabetic neuropathy. In the present review, we highlight the structural and functional significance of the BNB in health and disease, focusing on the pathological molecular events leading to BNB dysfunction in diabetic neuropathy. In addition, we discuss potential molecular targets involved in BNB homeostasis that may pave the way toward novel therapeutic strategies for treating diabetic neuropathy.
Neuron-targeted gene delivery is a promising strategy to treat peripheral neuropathies. Here we propose the use of polymeric nanoparticles based on thiolated trimethyl chitosan (TMCSH) to mediate targeted gene delivery to peripheral neurons upon a peripheral and minimally invasive intramuscular administration. Nanoparticles were grafted with the non-toxic carboxylic fragment of the tetanus neurotoxin (HC) to allow neuron targeting and were explored to deliver a plasmid DNA encoding for the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in a peripheral nerve injury model. The TMCSH-HC/BDNF nanoparticle treatment promoted the release and significant expression of BDNF in neural tissues, which resulted in an enhanced functional recovery after injury as compared to control treatments (vehicle and non-targeted nanoparticles), associated with an improvement in key pro-regenerative events, namely, the increased expression of neurofilament and growth-associated protein GAP-43 in the injured nerves. Moreover, the targeted nanoparticle treatment was correlated with a significantly higher density of myelinated axons in the distal stump of injured nerves, as well as with preservation of unmyelinated axon density as compared with controls and a protective role in injury-denervated muscles, preventing them from denervation. These results highlight the potential of TMCSH-HC nanoparticles as non-viral gene carriers to deliver therapeutic genes into the peripheral neurons and thus, pave the way for their use as an effective therapeutic intervention for peripheral neuropathies.
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