Mice with Type 2 Diabetes Present Significant Alterations in Their Tissue Biomechanical Properties and Histological Features.
Tânia B CruzFilomena A CarvalhoPaulo N MatafomeRaquel A SoaresNuno C SantosRui D M TravassoMaria José OliveiraPublished in: Biomedicines (2021)
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a complex metabolic disease often associated with severe complications that may result in patient morbidity or death. One T2DM etiological agent is chronic hyperglycemia, a condition that induces damaging biological processes, including impactful extracellular matrix (ECM) modifications, such as matrix components accumulation. The latter alters ECM stiffness, triggering fibrosis, inflammation, and pathological angiogenesis. Hence, studying ECM biochemistry and biomechanics in the context of T2DM, or obesity, is highly relevant. With this in mind, we examined both native and decellularized tissues of obese B6.Cg-Lep ob /J (ob/ob) and diabetic BKS.Cg-Dock7m+/+Lepr db J (db/db) mice models, and extensively investigated their histological and biomechanical properties. The tissues analyzed herein were those strongly affected by diabetes-skin, kidney, adipose tissue, liver, and heart. The referred organs and tissues were collected from 8-week-old animals and submitted to classical histological staining, immunofluorescence, scanning electron microscopy, rheology, and atomic force microscopy. Altogether, this systematic characterization has identified significant differences in the architecture of both ob/ob and db/db tissues, namely db/db skin presents loose epidermis and altered dermis structure, the kidneys have clear glomerulopathy traits, and the liver exhibits severe steatosis. The distribution of ECM proteins also pinpoints important differences, such as laminin accumulation in db/db kidneys and decreased hyaluronic acid in hepatocyte cytoplasm in both obese and diabetic mice. In addition, we gathered a significant set of data showing that ECM features are maintained after decellularization, making these matrices excellent biomimetic scaffolds for 3D in vitro approaches. Importantly, mechanical studies revealed striking differences between tissue ECM stiffness of control (C57BL/6J), obese, and diabetic mice. Notably, we have unveiled that the intraperitoneal adipose tissue of diabetic animals is significantly stiffer (G* ≈ 10,000 Pa) than that of ob/ob or C57BL/6J mice (G* ≈ 3000-5000 Pa). Importantly, this study demonstrates that diabetes and obesity selectively potentiate severe histological and biomechanical alterations in different matrices that may impact vital processes, such as angiogenesis, wound healing, and inflammation.
Keyphrases
- extracellular matrix
- adipose tissue
- wound healing
- type diabetes
- high fat diet induced
- insulin resistance
- glycemic control
- weight loss
- metabolic syndrome
- atomic force microscopy
- gene expression
- high fat diet
- oxidative stress
- electron microscopy
- cardiovascular disease
- hyaluronic acid
- drug induced
- atrial fibrillation
- liver injury
- high speed
- randomized controlled trial
- electronic health record
- endothelial cells
- bariatric surgery
- case report
- soft tissue
- obese patients
- skeletal muscle
- genome wide
- case control
- artificial intelligence
- wild type