The pathological implications of protein glycation

Michael Brownlee

Diabetes Research Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, USA


Abstract

Hyperglycemia, the most obvious metabolic abnormality in diabetes, is the primary causal factor responsible for the development of diabetic microvascular complications. There is considerable evidence linking hyperglycemia with the accelerated formation of irreversible nonenzymatic advanced glycosylation end products (AGEs), which subsequently accumulate in vessel wall proteins. The development of long-term vascular complications associated with diabetes appears to be related to the accumulation of these AGES. Compounds that inhibit the development of AGE formation prevent complications in animal models and, therefore, may prove useful in reducing chronic diabetes-related complications in patients.
Clin Invest Med 1995; 18 (4): 275-281

Table of contents: CIM vol. 18, no. 4


Copyright 1996 Canadian Medical Association