糖尿病性腎症と尿中低分子AGE(終末糖化産物,Advanced Glycation Endproduct)との関連について

Search this Article

Author

    • 三好, 秀明 ミヨシ, ヒデアキ

Bibliographic Information

Title

糖尿病性腎症と尿中低分子AGE(終末糖化産物,Advanced Glycation Endproduct)との関連について

Author

三好, 秀明

Author(Another name)

ミヨシ, ヒデアキ

University

北海道大学

Types of degree

博士 (医学)

Grant ID

甲第5059号

Degree year

2000-03-24

Note and Description

博士論文

Glucose react non-enzymatically with amino groups ef proteins to produce a diverse groups of protein-bound moieties with cross-linking properties called advanced glycation end-products (AGEs). A large number of studies suggest that tissue and circulating AGEs, especially those bound to small peptides, play an important role in the pathogenesis and development of diabetic complications. The aim of present study was to evaluate AGE-peptide levels in the urine in various stage of diabetic nephropathy and to analyze the structures of AGEs generatedin vivo. Urine samples were obtained from 100 type 2 diabetic patients with various stage of nephropathy, 39 non-diabetic patients with renal dysfunction, and 20 control subjects without diabetes or renal disease. Low molecular weight peptides (<10 kDa) were isolated from each samples and were used. Using size-exclusion HPLC monitored by AGE-specific fluorescence, three main fluorescence peaks were detected at molecular weights of 6,000 Da, 2,500 Da, and 300 Da. The fluorescence intensity of total and 6,000 Da peak increased together with the development of renal dysfunction in diabetic patients and strongly correlated with serum creatinine. There was no difference in total urinary AGE between diabetic and non-diabetic hemodialysis patients, suggesting that insufficient clearance during dialysis is more important than AGE production. A competitive ELISA using a polyclonal anti-AGE antibody, anion-exchange HPLC, and reversed-phase H PLC were performed on the peaks appearing in size-exclusive HPLC to further characterize the AGE composition. The 300 Da product was specific to diabetic patients with chronic renal failure and hemodialysis patients and may be a good marker to distinguish diabetic from non-diabetic renal failures. We also speculated that because of its low molecular weight, the 300 Da product might represent the final degradation product of AGE-peptides in the kidney.

9access

Codes

  • NII Article ID (NAID)
    500000189502
  • NII Author ID (NRID)
    • 8000000189785
  • DOI(NDL)
  • Text Lang
    • jpn
  • NDLBibID
    • 000000353816
  • Source
    • Institutional Repository
    • NDL ONLINE
    • NDL Digital Collections
Page Top