Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add more filters











Database
Language
Publication year range
1.
J Am Soc Nephrol ; 17(12): 3415-23, 2006 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17082241

ABSTRACT

Glomerular injury and albuminuria in acute glomerulonephritis are related to the severity of inflammatory process. Calpain, a calcium-activated cysteine protease, has been shown to participate in the development of the inflammatory process. Therefore, for determination of the role of calpain in the pathophysiology of acute glomerulonephritis, transgenic mice that constitutively express high levels of calpastatin, a calpain-specific inhibitor protein, were generated. Wild-type mice that were subjected to anti-glomerular basement membrane nephritis exhibited elevated levels of calpain activity in kidney cortex at the heterologous phase of the disease. This was associated with the appearance in urine of calpain activity, which originated potentially from inflammatory cells, abnormal transglomerular passage of plasma proteins, and tubular secretion. In comparison with nephritic wild-type mice, nephritic calpastatin-transgenic mice exhibited limited activation of calpain in kidney cortex and limited secretion of calpain activity in urine. This was associated with less severe glomerular injury (including capillary thrombi and neutrophil activity) and proteinuria. There was a reduction in NF-kappaB activation, suggesting that calpain may participate in inflammatory lesions through NF-kappaB activation. There also was a reduction in nephrin disappearance from the surface of podocytes, indicating that calpain activity would enhance proteinuria by affecting nephrin expression. Exposure of cultured podocytes to calpain decreased nephrin expression, and, conversely, exposure of these cells to calpastatin prevented TNF-alpha from decreasing nephrin expression, demonstrating a role for the secreted form of calpain. Thus, both activation and secretion of calpains participate in the development of immune glomerular injury.


Subject(s)
Calcium-Binding Proteins/genetics , Calpain/metabolism , Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors/genetics , Glomerulonephritis/metabolism , Kidney/metabolism , Albuminuria/etiology , Animals , Anti-Glomerular Basement Membrane Disease/chemically induced , Calpain/antagonists & inhibitors , Calpain/urine , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Inflammation/metabolism , Kidney/physiopathology , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Transgenic , NF-kappa B/metabolism
2.
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol ; 215(2): 146-57, 2006 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16546232

ABSTRACT

Previously we have shown that 90% of streptozotocin (STZ)-induced type-1 diabetic (DB) mice survive from acute renal failure (ARF) and death induced by a normally LD(90) dose (75 mg/kg, i.p.) of the nephrotoxicant S-1,2-dichlorovinyl-l-cysteine (DCVC). This remarkable protection is due to a combination of slower progression of DCVC-initiated renal injury and increased compensatory nephrogenic tissue repair in the DB kidneys. BRDU immunohistochemistry revealed that the DB condition led to 4-fold higher number of proximal tubular cells (PTC) entering S-phase of cell cycle. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that DB-induced augmentation of PTC into S-phase is accompanied by overexpression of the calpain-inhibitor calpastatin, which endogenously prevents the progression of DCVC-initiated renal injury mediated by the calpain escaping out of damaged PTCs. Immunohistochemical detection of renal calpain and its activity in the urine, over a time course after treatment with the LD(90) dose of DCVC, indicated progressive increase in leakage of calpain into the extracellular spaces of the injured PTCs of the non-diabetic (NDB) kidneys as compared to the DB kidneys. Calpastatin expression was minimally detected in the NDB kidneys, using immunohistochemistry, over the time course. On the other hand, consistently higher number of tubules in the DB kidney showed calpastatin expression over the time course. The lower leakage of calpain in the DB kidneys was commensurate with constitutively higher expression of calpastatin in the S-phase-laden PTCs of these mice. To test the protective role of newly divided/dividing PTCs, DB mice were given the anti-mitotic agent colchicine (CLC) (2 mg/kg and 1.5 mg/kg, i.p., on days 8 and 10 after STZ injection) prior to challenge with a LD(90) dose of DCVC, which led to 100% mortality by 48 h. Mortality was due to rapid progression of DCVC-initiated renal injury, suggesting that newly divided/dividing cells are instrumental in mitigating the progression of DCVC-initiated renal injury in DB. The anti-mitotic effect of CLC in DB kidney is associated with lower expression of calpastatin and higher leakage of calpain in the injured tubules. These findings suggest that constitutively higher cell division in the DB kidney is associated with overexpression of calpastatin, which reduces the progression of DCVC-initiated renal injury mediated by calpain on the one hand and accelerates nephrogenic tissue repair on the other, thereby restoring renal structure and function.


Subject(s)
Acetylcysteine/analogs & derivatives , Acute Kidney Injury/metabolism , Acute Kidney Injury/prevention & control , Calcium-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Calpain/antagonists & inhibitors , Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors/metabolism , Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental/metabolism , Acetylcysteine/toxicity , Acute Kidney Injury/pathology , Animals , Antimitotic Agents/pharmacology , Calpain/urine , Colchicine/pharmacology , Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental/complications , Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental/pathology , Drug Therapy, Combination , Kidney Function Tests , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/drug effects , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/metabolism , Kidney Tubules, Proximal/pathology , Longevity/drug effects , Male , Mice , Regeneration/drug effects
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL