Transcriptomic study of high‑glucose effects on human skin fibroblast cells.

2016 
Abstract Skin ulcers are a common complication of diabetes mellitus (DM). Fibroblasts are located within the dermis of skin tissue and can be damaged by diabetes. However, the underlying mechanism of how DM affects fibroblasts remains elusive. To understand the effects of DM on fibroblasts, the current study mimicked DM by high‑glucose (HG) supplementation in the culture medium of human foreskin primary fibroblast cells, and the analysis of transcriptomic changes was conducted. RNA sequencing‑based transcriptome analysis identified that, upon HG stress, 463 genes were upregulated and 351 genes downregulated (>1.5‑fold changes; P<0.05). These altered genes were distributed into 20 different pathways. In addition, gene ontology (GO) analysis indicated that 31 GO terms were enriched. Among the pathways identified, nuclear factor κB (NF‑κB) pathway genes were highly expressed, and the addition of Bay11‑7082, a typical NF‑κB signaling inhibitor, blocked the previously observed alterations in plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI1), an inflammation marker and frizzled class receptor 8 (FZD8), a Wnt signaling gene, expression that resulted from HG stress. Furthermore, an inhibitor of Wnt signaling diminished the role of Bay11‑7082 in the regulation of PAI1 expression under HG conditions, suggesting that Wnt signaling may function downstream of the NF‑κB pathway to protect fibroblast cells from HG stress. To the best of our knowledge, the current study is the first analysis of transcriptomic responses under HG stress in human fibroblasts. The data provided here may aid the understanding of the molecular mechanisms by which fibroblast cells are damaged in the skin of patients with DM.
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