Heba A Abdel-Hamid, Heba Marey, Manar Fouli Gaber Ibrahim
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Diabetes is one of the leading causes of endometrial diseases in women. No study has addressed the influence of hydrogen sulphide (H2S) donors on endometrial injury on top of type 1 diabetes. This research was conducted to study either the effect of sodium hydrosulphide (NaHS), the H2S donor, or DL-propargylglycine (PAG), the inhibitor of endogenous H2S production, on the endometrium of diabetic rats. A total of 40 female Wistar rats were separated into control group, diabetic group, diabetic group treated with NaHS and diabetic group treated with PAG. Serum levels of insulin, glucose, total cholesterol (TC) and triglycerides (TG) were assessed. Uterine tissue markers of oxidative stress, inflammation, apoptosis and cell proliferation were analysed. Diabetes-induced endometrial overgrowth associated with oxidative stress, inflammation and inhibition of apoptosis. NaHS administration reversed the previous conditions while PAG administration got them worse. We concluded that H2S prevented endometrial overgrowth in a rat model of type 1 diabetes through modulation of PPARγ/mTOR and Nrf-2/NF-κB pathways.
期刊介绍:
Archives of Physiology and Biochemistry: The Journal of Metabolic Diseases is an international peer-reviewed journal which has been relaunched to meet the increasing demand for integrated publication on molecular, biochemical and cellular aspects of metabolic diseases, as well as clinical and therapeutic strategies for their treatment. It publishes full-length original articles, rapid papers, reviews and mini-reviews on selected topics. It is the overall goal of the journal to disseminate novel approaches to an improved understanding of major metabolic disorders.
The scope encompasses all topics related to the molecular and cellular pathophysiology of metabolic diseases like obesity, type 2 diabetes and the metabolic syndrome, and their associated complications.
Clinical studies are considered as an integral part of the Journal and should be related to one of the following topics:
-Dysregulation of hormone receptors and signal transduction
-Contribution of gene variants and gene regulatory processes
-Impairment of intermediary metabolism at the cellular level
-Secretion and metabolism of peptides and other factors that mediate cellular crosstalk
-Therapeutic strategies for managing metabolic diseases
Special issues dedicated to topics in the field will be published regularly.