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Ameliorative effects of indomethacin at different concentrations on endothelial insulin resistance through two distinct pathways.

Indomethacin (IDMT), a non-selective inhibitor of cycloxygenase-2 (COX-2), plays important roles in anti-inflammation and analgesia and it is commonly used to treat the patients with rheumatic and rheumatoid arthritis. Besides, various literatures reported that IDMT is a synthetic ligand of peroxisome proliferator activated receptor gamma (PPARγ). Rosiglitazone (RSG), an insulin-sensitizer, is also a synthetic ligand and applied clinically to cure the patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. However, up to date little is known about whether IDMT ameliorates endothelial insulin resistance (IR). Accordingly, the purpose of this study is to investigate the effects of IDMT on endothelial IR and its underlying mechanism. Our present results showed that IDMT improved the endothelial IR induced by high glucose and fat concentration (HG/HF) in a concentration and time-dependent manner. Intriguingly, we further identified that 0.25 mM of IDMT noticeably induced the expression levels of PPARγ, AKT and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) but failed to notably reverse the increases in expression levels of COX-2, inhibitory κB kinase (IKK) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) induced by HG/HF; whereas 1.0 mM of IDMT exerted opposite effects compared with 0.25 mM of IDMT. Therefore, we conclude that IDMT ameliorates the endothelial IR induced by HG/HF through two distinct pathways, i.e., a lower concentration of IDMT through a PPARγ-AKT-eNOS pathway while a higher concentration mainly via an IKK-COX-2/TNFα pathway. The findings might provide a novel clinical use for IDMT to cure IR-related disorders.

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