268 research outputs found

    The Aging Kidney: Increased Susceptibility to Nephrotoxicity

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    Three decades have passed since a series of studies indicated that the aging kidney was characterized by increased susceptibility to nephrotoxic injury. Data from these experimental models is strengthened by clinical data demonstrating that the aging population has an increased incidence and severity of acute kidney injury (AKI). Since then a number of studies have focused on age-dependent alterations in pathways that predispose the kidney to acute insult. This review will focus on the mechanisms that are altered by aging in the kidney that may increase susceptibility to injury, including hemodynamics, oxidative stress, apoptosis, autophagy, inflammation and decreased repair

    Genomic Structure and Chromosomal Location of the Rat Gene Encoding the Zinc Finger Transcription Factor Kid-1

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    We have previously cloned and sequenced a novel zinc finger cDNA, Kid-1 , from the rat. Because of its developmentally regulated expression pattern and its suppression after renal injury, as well as its kindey-predominant expression, we propose that Kid-1 is likely to play an important role in renal gene regulation. Kid-1 encodes a predicted protein with 13 zinc fingers at the carboxy end and KrĆ¼ppel-associated box (KRAB) A and B regions at the amino terminus. Expression of a Kid-1-GAL4 chimeric protein results in strong transcriptional repression of cotransfected constructs containing GAL4 binding sites and a chloramphenicol acetyl transferase gene driven by either a minimal promoter or a SV40 enhancer. We now report the cloning, structural organization, and chromosomal localization of the Kid-1 gene. The Kid-1 gene is composed of four exons and three introns, closely reflecting the organization of the Kid-1 protein. The KRAB A and B regions are encoded by the second and third exons, respectively. The entire zinc finger region is encoded by the fourth exon. Using a combination of linkage analysis and somatic cell hybrid analysis, Kid-1was mapped to rat chromosome (RNO) 10. Kid-1, Il3, and Sparc form a tight linkage group on RNO10. Regional sublocalization to RNO10q21.3-q22 was established by fluorescence in situ hybridization.

    Cytosolic calcium and protein kinase C reduce complement-mediated glomerular epithelial injury

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    Cytosolic calcium and protein kinase C reduce complement-mediated glomerular epithelial injury. In rat membranous nephropathy, proteinuria is due to formation of the C5b-9 membrane attack complex of complement (C), and is associated with morphological evidence of glomerular epithelial cell (GEC) injury. Analogous morphological changes are induced by C5b-9 in cultured GEC. In addition, in cultured GEC C5b-9 induces Ca2+ influx, as well as Ca2+ mobilization and increased 1,2-diacylglycerol due to the activation of phospholipase C. In this study we investigated how this GEC activation pattern might influence C-mecliated GEC injury. We demonstrate that the C5b-9-induced increase in cytosolic Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) did not impair ATP generation by mitochondria, suggesting that it does not contribute to cytotoxicity. Moreover, this increase in [Ca2+]i protected GEC from C-mediated cytolysis. However, a large increase in [Ca2+]i (produced by the Ca2+ ionophore A23187) impaired ATP generation and aggravated C-mediated cytotoxicity, suggesting that intact mitochondrial activity is necessary for GEC to withstand C attack. Activation of protein kinase C (PKC) by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) also decreased C-mediated cytolysis. Conversely, C lysis was enhanced in GEC that had been pretreated for 18 hours with a high dose of PMA to deplete PKC, and following PKC inhibition with H-7. Therefore, PKC activation, possibly resulting from C5b-9-induced increase in 1,2-diacylglycerol, triggered mechanisms that protected GEC from C-mediated injury. Thus, as a consequence of C5b-9-induced phospholipase activation, the amount of C-induced GEC injury is diminished

    Characterization of a novel human serine protease that has extensive homology to bacterial heat shock endoprotease HtrA and is regulated by kidney ischemia.

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    We report the isolation and characterization of a cDNA encoding the novel mammalian serine protease Omi. Omi protein consists of 458 amino acids and has homology to bacterial HtrA endoprotease, which acts as a chaperone at low temperatures and as a proteolytic enzyme that removes denatured or damaged substrates at elevated temperatures. The carboxyl terminus of Omi has extensive homology to a mammalian protein called L56 (human HtrA), but unlike L56, which is secreted, Omi is localized in the endoplasmic reticulum. Omi has several novel putative protein-protein interaction motifs, as well as a PDZ domain and a Src homology 3-binding domain. Omi mRNA is expressed ubiquitously, and the gene is localized on human chromosome 2p12. Omi interacts with Mxi2, an alternatively spliced form of the p38 stress-activated kinase. Omi protein, when made in a heterologous system, shows proteolytic activity against a nonspecific substrate beta-casein. The proteolytic activity of Omi is markedly up-regulated in the mouse kidney following ischemia/reperfusion

    Arachidonate Metabolism and the Signaling Pathway of Induction of Apoptosis by Oxidized LDL/Oxysterol

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    Owing at least in part to oxysterol components that can induce apoptosis, oxidized LDL (oxLDL) is cytotoxic to mammalian cells with receptors that can internalize it. Vascular cells possess such receptors, and it appears that the apoptotic response of vascular cells to the oxysterols borne by oxLDL is an important part of the atherogenic effects of oxLDL. Thus, an analysis of the signaling pathway of apoptotic induction by oxysterols is of value in understanding the development of atherosclerotic plaque. In a prior study, we demonstrated an induction of calcium ion flux into cells treated with 25-hydroxycholesterol (25-OHC) and showed that this response is essential for 25-OHC-induced apoptosis. One possible signal transduction pathway initiated by calcium ion fluxes is the activation of cytosolic phospholipase A2 (cPLA2). In the current study, we demonstrate that activation of cPLA2 does occur in both macrophages and fibroblasts treated with 25-OHC or oxLDL. Activation is evidenced by 25-OHC-induced relocalization of cPLA2 to the nuclear envelope and arachidonic acid release. Loss of cPLA2 activity, either through genetic knockout in mice, or by treatment with a cPLA2 inhibitor, results in an attenuation of arachidonic acid release as well as of the apoptotic response to oxLDL in peritoneal macrophages or to 25-OHC in cultured fibroblast and macrophage cell lines

    Cytosolic Phospholipase A2Ī± and Eicosanoids Regulate Expression of Genes in Macrophages Involved in Host Defense and Inflammation

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    Acknowledgments: We thank Dr. Robert Barkley and Charis Uhlson for mass spectrometry analysis. Funding: This work was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health HL34303 (to C.C.L., R.C.M. and D.L.B), DK54741 (to J.V.B.), GM5322 (to D.L.W.) and the Wellcome Trust (to N.A.R.G. and G.D.B.). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Loss of leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 causes age-dependent bi-phasic alterations of the autophagy pathway

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Dominantly inherited missense mutations in leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) are the most common genetic cause of Parkinson's disease, but its normal physiological function remains unclear. We previously reported that loss of LRRK2 causes impairment of protein degradation pathways as well as increases of apoptotic cell death and inflammatory responses in the kidney of aged mice.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our analysis of <it>LRRK2</it>-/- kidneys at multiple ages, such as 1, 4, 7, and 20 months, revealed unique age-dependent development of a variety of molecular, cellular, and ultrastructural changes. Gross morphological abnormalities of the kidney, including altered size, weight, texture, and color, are evident in <it>LRRK2</it>-/- mice at 3-4 months of age, along with increased accumulation of autofluorescent granules in proximal renal tubules. The ratio of kidney/body weight in <it>LRRK2</it>-/- mice is increased at 1, 4, and 7 months of age (~10% at 1 month, and ~20% at 4 and 7 months), whereas the ratio is drastically decreased at 20 months of age (~50%). While kidney filtration function evaluated by levels of blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine is not significantly affected in <it>LRRK2</it>-/- mice at 12-14 months of age, expression of kidney injury molecule-1, a sensitive and specific biomarker for epithelial cell injury of proximal renal tubules, is up-regulated (~10-fold). Surprisingly, loss of LRRK2 causes age-dependent bi-phasic alterations of the autophagic activity in <it>LRRK2</it>-/- kidneys, which is unchanged at 1 month of age, enhanced at 7 months but reduced at 20 months, as evidenced by corresponding changes in the levels of LC3-I/II, a reliable autophagy marker, and p62, an autophagy substrate. Levels of Ī±-synuclein and protein carbonyls, a general oxidative damage marker, are also decreased in <it>LRRK2</it>-/- kidneys at 7 months of age but increased at 20 months. Interestingly, the age-dependent bi-phasic alterations in autophagic activity in <it>LRRK2</it>-/- kidneys is accompanied by increased levels of lysosomal proteins and proteases at 1, 7, and 20 months of age as well as progressive accumulation of autolysosomes and lipofuscin granules at 4, 7-10, and 20 months of age.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>LRRK2 is important for the dynamic regulation of autophagy function <it>in vivo</it>.</p

    Endoscopic Treatment of Esophageal Foreign Bodies in the Elderly

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    SummaryBackgroundIngestion of a foreign body is a prevalent condition among children and psychiatric patients; however, such an issue has seldom been discussed in the elderly.MethodsA retrospective review of medical records of patients more than 60 years of age with a diagnosis of esophageal foreign body (EFB) from December 2007 to December 2010 was performed. A total of 45 elderly patients (24 men and 21 women) were analyzed. Demographic data, impaction level of esophagus, types of EFB, underlying diseases, duration from ingestion to endoscopic intervention, endoscopic managements, and outcomes were analyzed.ResultsThe average age of these patients was 75.0 years (60ā€“95 years). Among the materials that caused esophageal impaction, the most frequent were bones of animal origin (17/45Ā =Ā 37.8%), followed by meat or food bolus (16/45Ā =Ā 35.6%), dental prostheses (8/45Ā =Ā 17.8%), and medicine packing (4/45Ā =Ā 8.8%). In about half of these patients, the EFBs were entrapped in the cervical esophagus. There was no mortality. The success of removing EFB at an initial stage in these patients was about 88.8% (40/45). The retrieval-associated complications occurred in six patients with mis-swallowing of fish bones and medicine packing; four had wound bleeding, which need endoscopic hemostasis, and the other two had penetrating wounds that needed surgical repair.ConclusionFlexible upper endoscopy is relatively safe and effective for extracting EFB in the elderly. Elderly patients with EFBs had a high rate of underlying diseases. Thus, additional care and considerations must be given to such population

    M1 muscarinic receptors inhibit L-type Ca2+ current and M-current by divergent signal transduction cascades

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    Ion channels reside in a sea of phospholipids. During normal fluctuations in membrane potential and periods of modulation, lipids that directly associate with channel proteins influence gating by incompletely understood mechanisms. In one model, M(1)-muscarinic receptors (M(1)Rs) may inhibit both Ca(2+) (L- and N-) and K(+) (M-) currents by losing a putative interaction between channels and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate (PIP(2)). However, we found previously that M(1)R inhibition of N-current in superior cervical ganglion (SCG) neurons requires loss of PIP(2) and generation of a free fatty acid, probably arachidonic acid (AA) by phospholipase A(2) (PLA(2)). It is not known whether PLA(2) activity and AA also participate in L- and M-current modulation in SCG neurons. To test whether PLA(2) plays a similar role in M(1)R inhibition of L- and M-currents, we used several experimental approaches and found unanticipated divergent signaling. First, blocking resynthesis of PIP(2) minimized M-current recovery from inhibition, whereas L-current recovered normally. Second, L-current inhibition required group IVa PLA(2) [cytoplasmic PLA(2) (cPLA(2))], whereas M-current did not. Western blot and imaging studies confirmed acute activation of cPLA(2) by muscarinic stimulation. Third, in type IIa PLA(2) [secreted (sPLA(2))](-/-)/cPLA(2)(-/-) double-knock-out SCG neurons, muscarinic inhibition of L-current decreased. In contrast, M-current inhibition remained unaffected but recovery was impaired. Our results indicate that L-current is inhibited by a pathway previously shown to control M-current over-recovery after washout of muscarinic agonist. Our findings support a model of M(1)R-meditated channel modulation that broadens rather than restricts the roles of phospholipids and fatty acids in regulating ion channel activity

    Intrinsic Epithelial Cells Repair the Kidney after Injury

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    SummaryUnderstanding the mechanisms of nephron repair is critical for the design of new therapeutic approaches to treat kidney disease. The kidney can repair after even a severe insult, but whether adult stem or progenitor cells contribute to epithelial renewal after injury and the cellular origin of regenerating cells remain controversial. Using genetic fate-mapping techniques, we generated transgenic mice in which 94%ā€“95% of tubular epithelial cells, but no interstitial cells, were labeled with either Ī²-galactosidase (lacZ) or red fluorescent protein (RFP). Two days after ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI), 50.5% of outer medullary epithelial cells coexpress Ki67 and RFP, indicating that differentiated epithelial cells that survived injury undergo proliferative expansion. After repair was complete, 66.9% of epithelial cells had incorporated BrdU, compared to only 3.5% of cells in the uninjured kidney. Despite this extensive cell proliferation, no dilution of either cell-fate marker was observed after repair. These results indicate that regeneration by surviving tubular epithelial cells is the predominant mechanism of repair after ischemic tubular injury in the adult mammalian kidney
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