Obesity lowers hyperglycemic threshold for impaired in vivo endothelial nitric oxide function

Abstract
Obesity is a risk for type II diabetes mellitus and increased vascular resistance. Disturbances of nitric oxide (NO) physiology occur in both obese animals and humans. In obese Zucker rats, we determined whether a protein kinase C-βII (PKC-βII) mechanism may lower the resting NO concentration ([NO]) and predispose endothelial NO abnormalities at lower glucose concentrations than occur in lean rats. NO was measured with microelectrodes touching in vivo intestinal arterioles. At rest, the [NO] in obese Zucker rats was 60 nm less than normal or about a 15% decline. After local blockade of PKC-βII with LY-333531, the [NO] increased ∼90 nm in obese rats but did not change in lean rats. In lean rats, administration of 300 mg/dl d-glucose for 45 min depressed endothelium-dependent dilation; only 200 mg/dl was required in obese animals. These various observations indicate that resting [NO] is depressed in obese rats by a PKC-βII mechanism and the hyperglycemic threshold for endothelial NO suppression is reduced to 200 mg/dl d-glucose.