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      A breaker of advanced glycation end products attenuates diabetes-induced myocardial structural changes.

      Circulation Research
      Animals, Blood Pressure, drug effects, Body Weight, Collagen, genetics, metabolism, Cytokines, Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental, complications, prevention & control, Gene Expression Regulation, Glycosylation End Products, Advanced, antagonists & inhibitors, Heart Ventricles, pathology, Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular, etiology, Immunohistochemistry, Male, Myocardium, Natriuretic Peptide, Brain, Organ Size, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Receptors, Immunologic, Thiazoles, pharmacology

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          Abstract

          The formation of advanced glycation end products (AGEs) on extracellular matrix components leads to accelerated increases in collagen cross linking that contributes to myocardial stiffness in diabetes. This study determined the effect of the crosslink breaker, ALT-711 on diabetes-induced cardiac disease. Streptozotocin diabetes was induced in Sprague-Dawley rats for 32 weeks. Treatment with ALT-711 (10 mg/kg) was initiated at week 16. Diabetic hearts were characterized by increased left ventricular (LV) mass and brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) expression, decreased LV collagen solubility, and increased collagen III gene and protein expression. Diabetic hearts had significant increases in AGEs and increased expression of the AGE receptors, RAGE and AGE-R3, in association with increases in gene and protein expression of connective tissue growth factor (CTGF). ALT-711 treatment restored LV collagen solubility and cardiac BNP in association with reduced cardiac AGE levels and abrogated the increase in RAGE, AGE-R3, CTGF, and collagen III expression. The present study suggests that AGEs play a central role in many of the alterations observed in the diabetic heart and that cleavage of preformed AGE crosslinks with ALT-711 leads to attenuation of diabetes-associated cardiac abnormalities in rats. This provides a potential new therapeutic approach for cardiovascular disease in human diabetes.

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