Short-Term l-arginine Treatment Mitigates Early Damage of Dermal Collagen Induced by Diabetes.
Irena MilerMihailo D RabasovićSonja AskrabicAndreas StylianouBato KoracAleksandra KoraćPublished in: Bioengineering (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Changes in the structural properties of the skin due to collagen alterations are an important factor in diabetic skin complications. Using a combination of photonic methods as an optic diagnostic tool, we investigated the structural alteration in rat dermal collagen I in diabetes, and after short-term l-arginine treatment. The multiplex approach shows that in the early phase of diabetes, collagen fibers are partially damaged, resulting in the heterogeneity of fibers, e.g., "patchy patterns" of highly ordered/disordered fibers, while l-arginine treatment counteracts to some extent the conformational changes in collagen-induced by diabetes and mitigates the damage. Raman spectroscopy shows intense collagen conformational changes via amides I and II in diabetes, suggesting that diabetes-induced structural changes in collagen originate predominantly from individual collagen molecules rather than supramolecular structures. There is a clear increase in the amounts of newly synthesized proline and hydroxyproline after treatment with l-arginine, reflecting the changed collagen content. This suggests that it might be useful for treating and stopping collagen damage early on in diabetic skin. Our results demonstrate that l-arginine attenuates the early collagen I alteration caused by diabetes and that it could be used to treat and prevent collagen damage in diabetic skin at a very early stage.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- tissue engineering
- glycemic control
- early stage
- nitric oxide
- oxidative stress
- molecular dynamics
- radiation therapy
- single cell
- squamous cell carcinoma
- mass spectrometry
- lymph node
- raman spectroscopy
- molecular dynamics simulations
- endothelial cells
- radiation induced
- risk factors
- amino acid
- soft tissue
- drug induced
- locally advanced
- real time pcr
- high glucose
- high speed
- water soluble