American Journal of Physiology: Renal, Fluid & Electrolyte Physiology (Abstracts) 2014-10-01

Acute hepatic ischemic-reperfusion injury induces a renal cortical "stress response," renal "cytoresistance," and an endotoxin hyperresponsive state.

Richard A Zager, Ali C M Johnson, Kirsten B Frostad

Index: Am. J. Physiol. Renal Physiol. 307(7) , F856-68, (2014)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Hepatic ischemic-reperfusion injury (HIRI) is considered a risk factor for clinical acute kidney injury (AKI). However, HIRI's impact on renal tubular cell homeostasis and subsequent injury responses remain ill-defined. To explore this issue, 30-45 min of partial HIRI was induced in CD-1 mice. Sham-operated or normal mice served as controls. Renal changes and superimposed injury responses (glycerol-induced AKI; endotoxemia) were assessed 2-18 h later. HIRI induced mild azotemia (blood urea nitrogen ∼45 mg/dl) in the absence of renal histologic injury or proteinuria, implying a "prerenal" state. However, marked renal cortical, and isolated proximal tubule, cytoprotective "stress protein" gene induction (neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, heme oxygenase-1, hemopexin, hepcidin), and increased Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) expression resulted (protein/mRNA levels). Ischemia caused release of hepatic heme-based proteins (e.g., cytochrome c) into the circulation. This corresponded with renal cortical oxidant stress (malondialdehyde increases). That hepatic derived factors can evoke redox-sensitive "stress protein" induction was implied by the following: peritoneal dialysate from HIRI mice, soluble hepatic extract, or exogenous cytochrome c each induced the above stress protein(s) either in vivo or in cultured tubule cells. Functional significance of HIRI-induced renal "preconditioning" was indicated by the following: 1) HIRI conferred virtually complete morphologic protection against glycerol-induced AKI (in the absence of hyperbilirubinemia) and 2) HIRI-induced TLR4 upregulation led to a renal endotoxin hyperresponsive state (excess TNF-α/MCP-1 gene induction). In conclusion, HIRI can evoke "renal preconditioning," likely due, in part, to hepatic release of pro-oxidant factors (e.g., cytochrome c) into the systemic circulation. The resulting renal changes can impact subsequent AKI susceptibility and TLR4 pathway-mediated stress. Copyright © 2014 the American Physiological Society.


Related Compounds

  • Hemopexin
  • Cytochrome C

Related Articles:

Ostreopexin: a hemopexin fold protein from the oyster mushroom, Pleurotus ostreatus.

2013-08-01

[Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1834(8) , 1468-73, (2013)]

Inhibition of endogenous MTF-1 signaling in zebrafish embryos identifies novel roles for MTF-1 in development.

2014-09-01

[Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1843(9) , 1818-33, (2014)]

Hemopexin-dependent heme uptake via endocytosis regulates the Bach1 transcription repressor and heme oxygenase gene activation.

2014-07-01

[Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1840(7) , 2351-60, (2014)]

Differential proteome profiling of pleural effusions from lung cancer and benign inflammatory disease patients.

2012-04-01

[Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1824(4) , 692-700, (2012)]

Hemopexin is up-regulated in plasma from type 1 diabetes mellitus patients: Role of glucose-induced ROS.

2012-06-27

[J. Proteomics 75(12) , 3760-77, (2012)]

More Articles...