Blood Catalase Activity in Gestational Diabetes Is Decreased but Not Associated with Pregnancy Complications
Author(s) -
László Góth,
Zoltán G. Tóth,
Ildikó Tarnai,
Maria Bérces,
Péter Török,
William N. Bigler
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
clinical chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.705
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1530-8561
pISSN - 0009-9147
DOI - 10.1373/clinchem.2005.055517
Subject(s) - catalase , superoxide dismutase , hydrogen peroxide , endocrinology , medicine , antioxidant , oxidative stress , chemistry , gestational diabetes , insulin , reactive oxygen species , biochemistry , biology , pregnancy , gestation , genetics
Gestational diabetes occurs with variable severity in 3%–5% of all pregnancies and may be related to oxidative stress and impaired antioxidant defenses (1). Antioxidant enzymes include superoxide dismutase, which produces hydrogen peroxide, and catalase, which consumes hydrogen peroxide. Catalase is the main regulator of hydrogen peroxide metabolism (2), which is associated with diabetes mechanisms such as Glut 4 expression, insulin secretion, insulin signaling, protein tyrosine phosphatase regulation, and glucose transport stimulation (3). Hydrogen peroxide has novel insulin-like effects, e.g., inhibition of lipolysis and reactivation of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxy kinase (4)(5), and insulin moderates hydrogen peroxide generation (6)(7) and catalase synthesis (8). High concentrations of hydrogen peroxide may damage heme proteins, cause cell death, and together with redox active metal ions, produce highly toxic hydroxyl radicals.High catalase activity in erythrocytes seems to provide antioxidant defense for tissues with low catalase activity, particularly pancreatic beta cells. Catalase is important in antioxidant defense against hydrogen peroxide (9)(10), but there are conflicting reports of decreases (11)(12), increases (13), and no change(14) in catalase activity in diabetes. A high incidence (14%) of diabetes mellitus observed in 63 Hungarian patients with inherited catalase deficiency (1 with type 1 and 7 with type 2 diabetes) could be associated with damage to oxidation-sensitive pancreatic beta cells by exposure to long-term increased hydrogen peroxide concentrations (15), but there have been conflicting reports from small studies of maternal and embryonic catalase in rat (16) and human(17) gestational diabetes.We compared blood catalase activity in patients with gestational diabetes, pregnant patients without diabetes, and nonpregnant nondiabetic individuals. We examined the catalase gene mutations associated with decreased catalase activities and evaluated the effects of decreased maternal blood catalase activity on complications in newborns.Study participants included 60 pregnant women with gestational diabetes …
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