Author/Authors :
Niknam ، Zahra Proteomics Research Center - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Science , Samadi ، Mahrokh Nephrology and Kidney Transplant Research Center, Clinical Research Institute - Urmia University of Medical Sciences , Ghalibafsabbaghi ، Ataollah Student Research Committee - Urmia University of Medical Sciences , Chodari ، leila
Abstract :
Introduction: This research investigates the impact of insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF -I) and exercise on mediators associated with angiogenesis (VEGF-A, TSP-1, and NF-кβ) and capillarization status of the diabetic rats’ hearts. Methods: Splitting of forty Wistar male rats into five groups occurred as following: control, diabetes, diabetes+IGF-I, diabetes+exercise, and diabetes+exercise+IGF-I. Through intraperitoneal administration of 60 mg/kg streptozotocin, the condition of Type 1 diabetes was escalated. After four weeks of treatment with IGF-I (2 mg/kg/day) or treadmill exercise (17 m/min, zero degrees slope, 30 min/day), in the heart, microvascular density and protein levels of VEGF-A, TSP-1, and NF-кβ were determined by H E staining and ELISA, respectively. Results: Within the diabetic group, observations present a significant decrease in VEGF-A and MVD levels, whereas an increase in the TSP-1 and NF-Κb levels. While these impacts were reversed by either IGF-I or exercise treatments, simultaneous treatment had synergistic effects. Moreover, among diabetic rats, undesirable histologic alterations of the heart were demonstrated, including myonecrosis, interstitial edema, hemorrhage, and mononuclear immune cell infiltration, whereas treatments improved these changes. Conclusion: These data manifest that IGF-I and exercise can increase the cardiac angiogenesis of diabetic rats through increasing expression of VEGF-A, and decreasing TSP-1 and NF-кβ proteins level, also can improve myocardial tissue damages.
Keywords :
Diabetes , Angiogenesis , Heart , VEGF , A , TSP , 1 , NF , кβ