95 research outputs found

    Urinary tract obstruction induces transient accumulation of COX-2-derived prostanoids in kidney tissue

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    Inhibitors of cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 prevent suppression of aquaporin-2 and reduce polyuria in the acute phase after release of bilateral ureteral obstruction (BUO). We hypothesized that BUO leads to COX-2-mediated local accumulation of prostanoids in inner medulla (IM) tissue. To test this, rats were subjected to BUO and treated with selective COX-1 or COX-2 inhibitors. Tissue was examined at 2, 6, 12, and 24 h after BUO. COX-2 protein abundance increased in IM 12 and 24 h after onset of BUO but did not change in cortex. COX-1 did not change at any time points in any region. A full profile of all five primary prostanoids was obtained by mass spectrometric determination of PGE(2), PGF(2α), 6-keto-PGF(1α), PGD(2), and thromboxane (Tx) B(2) concentrations in kidney cortex/outer medulla and IM fractions. IM concentration of PGE(2), 6-keto-PGF(1α), and PGF(2α) was increased at 6 h BUO, and PGE(2) and PGF(2α) increased further at 12 h BUO. TxB(2) increased after 12 h BUO. 6-keto-PGF(1α) remained significantly increased after 24 h BUO. The COX-2 inhibitor parecoxib lowered IM PGE(2,) TxB(2), 6-keto-PGF(1α), and PGF(2α) below vehicle-treated BUO and sham rats at 6, 12 and, 24 h BUO. The COX-1 inhibitor SC-560 lowered PGE(2), PGF(2α), and PGD(2) in IM compared with untreated 12 h BUO, but levels remained significantly above sham. In cortex tissue, PGE(2) and 6-keto-PGF(1α) concentrations were elevated at 6 h only. In conclusion, COX-2 activity contributes to the transient increase in prostacyclin metabolite 6-keto-PGF(1α) and TxB(2) concentration in the kidney IM, and COX-2 is the predominant isoform that is responsible for accumulation of PGE(2) and PGF(2α) with minor, but significant, contributions from COX-1. PGD(2) synthesis is mediated exclusively by COX-1. In BUO, therapeutic interventions aimed at the COX-prostanoid pathway should target primarily COX-2

    Organ-specific responses during brain death:increased aerobic metabolism in the liver and anaerobic metabolism with decreased perfusion in the kidneys

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    Hepatic and renal energy status prior to transplantation correlates with graft survival. However, effects of brain death (BD) on organ-specific energy status are largely unknown. We studied metabolism, perfusion, oxygen consumption, and mitochondrial function in the liver and kidneys following BD. BD was induced in mechanically-ventilated rats, inflating an epidurally-placed Fogarty-catheter, with sham-operated rats as controls. A 9.4T-preclinical MRI system measured hourly oxygen availability (BOLD-related R2*) and perfusion (T1-weighted). After 4 hrs, tissue was collected, mitochondria isolated and assessed with high-resolution respirometry. Quantitative proteomics, qPCR, and biochemistry was performed on stored tissue/plasma. Following BD, the liver increased glycolytic gene expression (Pfk-1) with decreased glycogen stores, while the kidneys increased anaerobic- (Ldha) and decreased gluconeogenic-related gene expression (Pck-1). Hepatic oxygen consumption increased, while renal perfusion decreased. ATP levels dropped in both organs while mitochondrial respiration and complex I/ATP synthase activity were unaffected. In conclusion, the liver responds to increased metabolic demands during BD, enhancing aerobic metabolism with functional mitochondria. The kidneys shift towards anaerobic energy production while renal perfusion decreases. Our findings highlight the need for an organ-specific approach to assess and optimise graft quality prior to transplantation, to optimise hepatic metabolic conditions and improve renal perfusion while supporting cellular detoxification

    Organ-specific metabolic profiles of the liver and kidney during brain death and afterwards during normothermic machine perfusion of the kidney

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    We investigated metabolic changes during brain death (BD) using hyperpolarized magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy and ex vivo graft glucose metabolism during normothermic isolated perfused kidney (IPK) machine perfusion. BD was induced in mechanically ventilated rats by inflation of an epidurally placed catheter; sham-operated rats served as controls. Hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate MR spectroscopy was performed to quantify pyruvate metabolism in the liver and kidneys at 3 time points during BD, preceded by injecting hyperpolarized[1-13C]pyruvate. Following BD, glucose oxidation was measured using tritium-labeled glucose (d-6-3H-glucose) during IPK reperfusion. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction and biochemistry were performed on tissue/plasma. Immediately following BD induction, lactate increased in both organs (liver: eµd0.21, 95% confidence interval [CI] [−0.27, −0.15]; kidney: eµd0.26, 95% CI [−0.40, −0.12]. After 4 hours of BD, alanine production decreased in the kidney (eµd0.14, 95% CI [0.03, 0.25], P <.05). Hepatic lactate and alanine profiles were significantly different throughout the experiment between groups (P <.01). During IPK perfusion, renal glucose oxidation was reduced following BD vs sham animals (eµd0.012, 95% CI [0.004, 0.03], P <.001). No differences in enzyme activities were found. Renal gene expression of lactate-transporter MCT4 increased following BD (P <.01). In conclusion, metabolic processes during BD can be visualized in vivo using hyperpolarized magnetic resonance imaging and with glucose oxidation during ex vivo renal machine perfusion. These techniques can detect differences in the metabolic profiles of the liver and kidney following BD

    Inotropic Effects of Prostacyclins on the Right Ventricle Are Abolished in Isolated Rat Hearts With Right-Ventricular Hypertrophy and Failure

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    BACKGROUND: Prostacyclin mimetics are vasodilatory agents used in the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension. The direct effects of prostanoids on right-ventricular (RV) function are unknown. We aimed to investigate the direct effects of prostacyclin mimetics on RV function in hearts with and without RV hypertrophy and failure. METHODS: Wistar rats were subjected to pulmonary trunk banding to induce compensated RV hypertrophy (n = 32) or manifest RV failure (n = 32). Rats without banding served as healthy controls (n = 30). The hearts were excised and perfused in a Langendorff system and subjected to iloprost, treprostinil, epoprostenol, or MRE-269 in increasing concentrations. The effect on RV function was evaluated using a balloon-tipped catheter inserted into the right ventricle. RESULTS: In control hearts, iloprost, treprostinil, and MRE-269 improved RV function. The effect was, however, absent in hearts with RV hypertrophy and failure. Treprostinil and MRE-269 even impaired RV function in hearts with manifest RV failure. CONCLUSIONS: Iloprost, treprostinil, and MRE-269 improved RV function in the healthy rat heart. RV hypertrophy abolished the positive inotropic effect, and in the failing right ventricle, MRE-269 and treprostinil impaired RV function. This may be related to changes in prostanoid receptor expression and reduced coronary flow reserve in the hypertrophic and failing right ventricle

    Acetate Kinase Isozymes Confer Robustness in Acetate Metabolism

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    Acetate kinase (ACK) (EC no: 2.7.2.1) interconverts acetyl-phosphate and acetate to either catabolize or synthesize acetyl-CoA dependent on the metabolic requirement. Among all ACK entries available in UniProt, we found that around 45% are multiple ACKs in some organisms including more than 300 species but surprisingly, little work has been done to clarify whether this has any significance. In an attempt to gain further insight we have studied the two ACKs (AckA1, AckA2) encoded by two neighboring genes conserved in Lactococcus lactis (L. lactis) by analyzing protein sequences, characterizing transcription structure, determining enzyme characteristics and effect on growth physiology. The results show that the two ACKs are most likely individually transcribed. AckA1 has a much higher turnover number and AckA2 has a much higher affinity for acetate in vitro. Consistently, growth experiments of mutant strains reveal that AckA1 has a higher capacity for acetate production which allows faster growth in an environment with high acetate concentration. Meanwhile, AckA2 is important for fast acetate-dependent growth at low concentration of acetate. The results demonstrate that the two ACKs have complementary physiological roles in L. lactis to maintain a robust acetate metabolism for fast growth at different extracellular acetate concentrations. The existence of ACK isozymes may reflect a common evolutionary strategy in bacteria in an environment with varying concentrations of acetate

    X-shooter, the new wide band intermediate resolution spectrograph at the ESO Very Large Telescope

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    X-shooter is the first 2nd generation instrument of the ESO Very Large Telescope(VLT). It is a very efficient, single-target, intermediate-resolution spectrograph that was installed at the Cassegrain focus of UT2 in 2009. The instrument covers, in a single exposure, the spectral range from 300 to 2500 nm. It is designed to maximize the sensitivity in this spectral range through dichroic splitting in three arms with optimized optics, coatings, dispersive elements and detectors. It operates at intermediate spectral resolution (R~4,000 - 17,000, depending on wavelength and slit width) with fixed echelle spectral format (prism cross-dispersers) in the three arms. It includes a 1.8"x4" Integral Field Unit as an alternative to the 11" long slits. A dedicated data reduction package delivers fully calibrated two-dimensional and extracted spectra over the full wavelength range. We describe the main characteristics of the instrument and present its performance as measured during commissioning, science verification and the first months of science operations.Comment: accepted for publication in A&

    The effect of age and unilateral leg immobilisation for 2 weeks on substrate ulilisation during moderate-intensity exercise in human skeletal muscle

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    Age and inactivity have been associated with intramuscular triglyceride (IMTG) accumulation. Here, we attempt to disentangle these factors by studying the effect of 2 weeks of unilateral leg immobilization on substrate utilization across the legs during moderate-intensity exercise in young (n = 17; 23 ± 1 years old) and older men (n = 15; 68 ± 1 years old), while the contralateral leg served as the control. After immobilization, the participants performed two-legged isolated knee-extensor exercise at 20±1W(_50% maximalwork capacity) for 45 min with catheters inserted in the brachial artery and both femoral veins.Biopsy samples obtained from vastus lateralis muscles of both legs before and after exercise were used for analysis of substrates, protein content and enzyme activities. During exercise, leg substrate utilization (respiratoryquotient) did not differ between groups or legs. Leg fatty acid uptake was greater in older than in young men, and although young men demonstrated net leg glycerol release during exercise, older men showed net glycerol uptake. At baseline, IMTG, muscle pyruvate dehydrogenase complex activity and the protein content of adipose triglyceride lipase, acetyl-CoA carboxylase 2 and AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK)γ3 were higher in young than in older men. Furthermore, adipose triglyceride lipase, plasma membrane-associated fatty acid binding protein and AMPKγ3 subunit protein contents were lower and IMTG was higher in the immobilized than the contralateral leg in young and older men. Thus, immobilization and age did not affect substrate choice (respiratory quotient) during moderate exercise, but the whole-leg and molecular differences in fatty acid mobilization could explain the age- and immobilization-induced IMTG accumulation
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