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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Studies of aldose reductase using neuronal cell culture and ligated rat sciatic nerve.

Sorbinil (CP 45,634), a potent aldose reductase ( AR) inhibitor, has the ability to normalize both sorbitol levels and functional parameters such as orthograde axonal transport and motor nerve conduction velocity in peripheral nerves of diabetic rats, which implicates flux through the polyol pathway in the pathophysiology of diabetic neuropathy. In order to understand more fully the role of this enzyme, it is important to determine the major cellular location of AR in peripheral nerve. Experiments were designed that have taken advantage of the observation that peripheral nerve axons degenerate distal to an injury site, while Schwann cells remain viable. One sciatic nerve in each experimental rat was chronically ligated (up to 6 weeks) before inducing diabetes by an intravenous (iv) injection of streptozotocin (STZ; 65 mg/kg). Two days after the STZ injection, both sciatic nerves were removed from each animal, and the ligated nerve was divided into proximal (Schwann cells and axons) and distal (Schwann cells only) portions before being processed for sorbitol determinations. The intact nerves and the proximal portion of the ligated nerves (having both Schwann cells and axons) retained the ability to accumulate sorbitol after STZ injection, while the distal portion (having Schwann cells only) lost this capacity 4 days after ligation. This lack of ability to accumulate sorbitol was not due to failure of the substrate (glucose) to reach the distal nerve segment. Additionally, homogenates of whole nerves and of proximal portions of ligated nerves were able to form sorbitol from glucose in the presence of NADPH while homogenates of distal portions of ligated nerves had lost approximately 85% of this activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)[1]

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