Volume 1043, Issue 1 p. 759-766

Advanced Glycation End Products in Diabetes-Associated Atherosclerosis and Renal Disease: Interventional Studies

KARIN A. JANDELEIT-DAHM

KARIN A. JANDELEIT-DAHM

Danielle Alberti Memorial Centre for Diabetes Complications, Baker Heart Research Institute, Wynn Domain, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

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MARKUS LASSILA

MARKUS LASSILA

Danielle Alberti Memorial Centre for Diabetes Complications, Baker Heart Research Institute, Wynn Domain, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

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TERRI J. ALLEN

Corresponding Author

TERRI J. ALLEN

Danielle Alberti Memorial Centre for Diabetes Complications, Baker Heart Research Institute, Wynn Domain, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Address for correspondence: Dr. Terri Allen, Baker Heart Research Institute, P.O. Box 6492, Melbourne 8008, Australia. Voice: +613 8532 1453; fax: +613 8532 1288. [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 09 January 2006
Citations: 36

Abstract

Abstract: There is increasing evidence that advanced glycation end products (AGEs) and their interactions with various receptors (in particular, the receptor RAGE) play a pivotal role in the development and progression of diabetic macro- and microvascular complications. Several approaches have been used to inhibit tissue accumulation of AGEs in diabetes, including inhibitors of AGE formation such as aminoguanidine, ALT 946, and pyridoxamine—or putative cross-link breakers such as ALT 711. Alternative interventions have also included the administration of a soluble receptor for RAGE, sRAGE, thus capturing circulating AGEs and preventing them from binding to the cell-bound full-length receptor RAGE, thereby inhibiting the proinflammatory and profibrotic response following AGE-RAGE binding. In this review we summarize the evidence for such antiglycation therapies in retarding or delaying the development and progression of diabetes-associated atherosclerosis and renal disease while focusing on interventional strategies inhibiting AGE accumulation. In summary, all approaches have been shown to confer some degree of antiatherosclerotic and renoprotective effects, albeit to different degrees and by different mechanisms.