Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033687 (proteinuria)
24,015 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Following experimental rhabdomyolysis, animals become resistant to heme protein-induced acute renal failure (ARF). The goals of this study were to: (a) ascertain whether this resistance, previously documented only in vivo, is expressed directly at the proximal tubular cell level; (b) determine whether heme proteinuria (vs. other consequences of rhabdomyolysis) is its trigger; and (c) ascertain some of its subcellular determinants. Rats were injected with a borderline toxic dose of glycerol and 24 hours later proximal tubular segments (PTS) were isolated for study. Their vulnerability to diverse forms of injury (FeSO4-induced oxidant stress, hypoxia, Ca2+ ionophore, cytochalasin D, PLA2) was compared to that found in normal PTS. Post-glycerol PTS manifested significant resistance to each insult (decreased lactate dehydrogenase +/- N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminidase release). Protection against FeSO4 was virtually complete and it was associated with a 50% decrease in membrane lipid peroxidation. No decrease in hydroxyl radical generation was noted during the FeSO4 challenge (salicylate trap assessment), suggesting a primary increase in membrane resistance to attack. That PLA2 addition caused less deacylation, plasma membrane enzyme (alanine aminopeptidase) release, and LDH leakage from post-glycerol versus normal tubules supported this hypothesis. To test whether cytoresistance was specifically triggered by heme proteins (vs. being a non-specific filtered protein effect, or a result of endotoxin cascade activation), rats were injected with purified myoglobin, non-heme containing filterable proteins, or endotoxin. Only myoglobin induced cytoresistance. In vivo heme oxygenase inhibition (tin-protoporphyrin) did not block the emergence of cytoresistance and it was expressed despite Na,K-ATPase inhibition (ouabain) or cytoskeletal disruption (cytochalasin D). In vivo heat shock failed to protect. In conclusion, (1) rhabdomyolysis induces broad based proximal tubular cytoresistance; (2) heme proteinuria is its trigger; and (3) it is most easily explained by a primary increase in plasma membrane resistance to attack.
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PMID:Heme protein-induced tubular cytoresistance: expression at the plasma membrane level. 763 63

Podocyte injury is a central mechanism in the pathogenesis of proteinuria. Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) has been suggested to protect podocytes from cellular injury. Here we investigated whether PGE2-induced gene expression accounts for the protective role of PGE2 in podocytes. Using a suppressive-subtractive hybridization method, we isolated a differentially expressed clone that was identified as Stra13, a recently described retinoic acid-inducible gene. PGE2, forskolin, and retinoic acid induced a time-dependent up-regulation of Stra13 mRNA and protein expression in podocytes. To test the function of Stra13 in podocytes, Stra13 was overexpressed by using retroviral gene transfer. Compared with control cells, cells overexpressing Stra13 showed markedly reduced NADPH-dependent superoxid anion generation. Furthermore, expression of heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1) was increased in podocytes overexpressing Stra13. HO-1 plays an important protective role in the defense against reactive oxygen species (ROS). After stimulation with exogenous ROS, Stra13-overexpressing podocytes were more resistant to oxidative stress than were control cells. Our data indicate that Stra13 may play an important protective role against oxidative stress in podocytes. ROS are involved in the pathogenesis of glomerular inflammation in several forms of glomerulonephritis. Therefore, knowledge about protective mechanisms may provide insight into new therapeutic strategies for glomerulopathies.
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PMID:Stra13, a prostaglandin E2-induced gene, regulates the cellular redox state of podocytes. 1259 85

There is accumulating evidence that haem oxygenase (HO)-1 plays a protective role in various disorders. The beneficial efficacy of HO-1 induction therapy has been shown in renal diseases such as glomerulonephritis, interstitial nephritis and drug induced nephrotoxicity. However, involvement of HO-1 in the development of autoimmune renal diseases remains uncertain. To assess the clinical efficacy of HO-1 induction therapy for lupus glomerulonephritis, MRL/lpr mice were intraperitoneally injected with 100 micromol/kg hemin, a potent HO-1 inducer, or PBS as controls, once a week from 6 weeks of age to 21-24 weeks-old. We found that treatment with hemin led to a significant reduction of proteinuria and remarkable amelioration of glomerular lesions accompanied by decreased immune depositions. In addition, the circulating IgG anti-double-stranded DNA antibody level was significantly decreased in hemin treated mice when compared with controls. A single intraperitoneal injection with hemin resulted in reduction of inducible nitric oxide synthase expression in the kidney and spleen, and serum interferon-gamma level. Our results suggest that HO-1 induction therapy ameliorates lupus nephritis by suppressing nitric oxide (NO) dependent inflammatory responses and attenuating production of pathogenic autoantibodies.
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PMID:Chemical induction of HO-1 suppresses lupus nephritis by reducing local iNOS expression and synthesis of anti-dsDNA antibody. 1549 32

Clinical studies have demonstrated that some antihypertensive agents provide renoprotection independent of BP lowering. Recent in vitro and in vivo studies evaluated the mechanisms involved in this protection. First, the in vitro effects of several angiotensin II type 1 receptor blockers (ARB), calcium channel blockers (CCB), and beta blockers (BB) on various mediators were compared: Formation of pentosidine (an advanced glycation end product), hydroxyl radical-induced formation of o-tyrosine, and transition metals-induced oxidation of ascorbic acid (the Fenton reaction). All of the six tested ARB but neither the six CCB nor the nine BB inhibited pentosidine formation. ARB, as well as BB but not CCB, inhibited hydroxyl radicals-mediated o-tyrosine formation. ARB but neither BB nor CCB inhibited efficiently transition metals-catalyzed oxidation of ascorbic acid. Second, the in vivo consequences for the kidney of these various in vitro effects were evaluated. Hypertensive, type 2 diabetic rats with nephropathy, SHR/NDmcr-cp, were given for 20 wk either olmesartan (ARB) or nifedipine (CCB), or atenolol (BB). Despite similar BP reduction, only ARB significantly reduced proteinuria and prevented glomerular and tubulointerstitial damage (mesangial activation, podocyte injury, tubulointerstitial injury, and inflammatory cell infiltration). It is interesting that only ARB prevented abnormal iron deposition in the interstitium, corrected chronic hypoxia, reduced expressions of heme oxygenase and p47phox (a subunit of NADPHoxidase), and inhibited pentosidine formation (which correlates well with proteinuria). These observations confirm unique renoprotective properties of ARB, independent of BP lowering but related to decreased oxidative stress (hydroxyl radicals scavenging and inhibition of the Fenton reaction), correction of chronic hypoxia, and inhibition of advanced glycation end product formation and of abnormal iron deposition. These benefits of ARB may contribute to the renoprotection observed beyond BP lowering.
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PMID:Renoprotective properties of angiotensin receptor blockers beyond blood pressure lowering. 1623 4

Recent studies have established that erythropoietin (EPO) is a pleiotropic cytokine. In this study we investigated whether pleiotropic effects of EPO may involve regulation of heme oxygenase (HO)-1, an anti-oxidative stress protein. A stimulatory effect of EPO on HO-1 expression was demonstrated in cultured renal endothelial cells, in which EPO decreased intracellular oxidative stress and provided cytoprotection against H(2)O(2). These beneficial effects were partially reversed by a HO-1 inhibitor. We then evaluated whether EPO induces HO-1 and ameliorates renal injury in vivo. Administration of EPO to Dahl salt-sensitive (DS) rats with low salt diet, a model of chronic tubulointerstitial injury, reduced proteinuria, and renal injury including peritubular capillaries rarefaction as compared to vehicle-treated DS rats. This renoprotection was associated with up-regulation of HO-1 in the kidney. In conclusion, EPO-induced HO-1 expression is likely to provide cytoprotection against oxidative stress.
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PMID:Erythropoietin induces heme oxygenase-1 expression and attenuates oxidative stress. 1756 Sep 35

Upregulating the heme oxygenase (HO) system removes the prooxidant heme, and thus is cytoprotective. Additionally, the products from the HO pathway including, carbon monoxide, bilirubin, and biliverdin, scavenge reactive oxygen species, inhibit lipid peroxidation, and suppress tissue inflammation, while the iron formed enhances the synthesis of the antioxidant ferritin. Deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt hypertension, a model of human primary aldosteronism, causes oxidative stress and impairs renal function by stimulating inflammatory/oxidative transcription factors such as NF-kappaB and activating protein (AP-1). The effect of the HO system in end-organ damage in mineralocorticoid-induced hypertension has not been fully characterized. In this study, the administration of the HO inducer hemin lowered blood pressure (191 vs. 135 mmHg; n = 22, P < 0.01), increased creatinine clearance, and reduced kidney hypertrophy proteinuria, albuminuria, and histopathological lesions, including glomerular hypertrophy, glomerulosclerosis, tubular dilation, tubular cast formation, and interstitial mononuclear cell infiltration in nephrectomy/DOCA-high-salt-hypertension. The renoprotection was accompanied by reduced levels of NF-kappaB, AP-1, fibronectin, transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta, and 8-isoprostane, a marker of oxidative stress. Correspondingly, a robust increase in total antioxidant capacity, HO activity, cGMP, and an antioxidant like ferritin was observed in hemin-treated animals. Our findings suggest that suppression of oxidative/inflammatory insults alongside the corresponding decline of fibronectin and TGF-beta, an activator of extracellular matrix proteins, may account for the attenuation of renal histopathological lesions and the antihypertrophic effects of hemin. The multifaceted interaction among the HO system, TGF-beta, fibronectin, AP-1, and NF-kappaB may be explored to design new drugs against end-stage-organ damage.
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PMID:Hemin therapy attenuates kidney injury in deoxycorticosterone acetate-salt hypertensive rats. 1911 43

Chronic allograft nephropathy (CAN) represents progressive deterioration of renal allograft function with fibroinflammatory changes. CAN, recently reclassified as interstitial fibrosis (IF) and tubular atrophy (TA) with no known specific etiology, is a major cause of late renal allograft loss and remains a significant deleterious factor of successful renal transplantation. Carbon monoxide (CO), an effector byproduct of heme oxygenase pathway, is known to have potent anti-inflammatory and antifibrotic functions. We hypothesized that inhaled CO would inhibit fibroinflammatory process of CAN and restore renal allograft function, even when the treatment was initiated after CAN was established. Lewis rat kidney grafts were orthotopically transplanted into binephrectomized allogenic Brown Norway rats under brief tacrolimus (0.5 mg/kg im, days 0-6). At day 60, CO (20 ppm) inhalation was initiated to recipients and continued until day 150 or animal death. Development of CAN was confirmed at day 60 with decreased creatinine clearance (CCr), significant proteinuria, and histopathological findings of TA, IF, and intimal arteritis. Air-treated control recipients continued to deteriorate with further declines of CCr and increases of urinary protein excretion and died with a median survival of 82 days. In contrast, progression of CAN was decelerated when recipients received CO on days 60-150, showing markedly improved graft histopathology, restored renal function, and improved recipient survival to a median of >150 days. CO significantly reduced intragraft mRNA levels for IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha at day 90. Expression of profibrotic TGF-beta/Smad was significantly suppressed with CO, together with downregulation of ERK-MAPK pathways. Continuous CO (20 ppm) treatment for days 0-30, days 30-60, or days 0-90, or daily 1-h CO (250 ppm) treatment for days 0-90, also showed efficacy in inhibiting CAN. The study demonstrates that CO is able to inhibit progression of fibroinflammatory process of CAN, restore renal allograft function, and improve survival even when the treatment is started after CAN is diagnosed.
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PMID:Low-dose carbon monoxide inhibits progressive chronic allograft nephropathy and restores renal allograft function. 1936 89

Induction of heme oxygenase (HO)-1 is a key defense mechanism against oxidative stress. Compared with tubules, glomeruli are refractory to HO-1 upregulation in response to injury. This can be a disadvantage as it may be associated with insufficient production of cytoprotective heme-degradation metabolites. We, therefore, explored whether 1) targeted HO-1 expression can be achieved in glomeruli without altering their physiological integrity and 2) this expression reduces proteinuria in immune injury induced by an anti-glomerular basement membrane (GBM) antibody (Ab). We employed a 4.125-kb fragment of a mouse nephrin promoter downstream to which a FLAG-tagged hHO-1 cDNA sequence was inserted and subsequently generated transgenic mice from the FVB/N parental strain. There was a 16-fold higher transgene expression in the kidney than nonspecific background (liver) while the transprotein immunolocalized in glomerular epithelial cells (GEC). There was no change in urinary protein excretion, indicating that GEC-targeted HO-1 expression had no effect on glomerular protein permeability. Urinary protein excretion in transgenic mice with anti-GBM Ab injury (days 3 and 6) was significantly lower compared with wild-type controls. There was no significant change in renal expression levels of profibrotic (TGF-beta1) or anti-inflammatory (IL-10) cytokines in transgenic mice with anti-GBM Ab injury. These observations indicate that GEC-targeted HO-1 expression does not alter glomerular physiological integrity and reduces proteinuria in glomerular immune injury.
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PMID:GEC-targeted HO-1 expression reduces proteinuria in glomerular immune injury. 1958 44

Pre-eclampsia, a pregnancy-specific multi-organ syndrome characterized by widespread endothelial damage, is a new risk factor for cardiovascular disease. No therapies exist to prevent or treat this condition, even to achieve a modest improvement in pregnancy length or birth weight. Co-administration of soluble VEGFR-1 [VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) receptor-1; more commonly known as sFlt-1 (soluble Fms-like tyrosine kinase-1)] and sEng (soluble endoglin) to pregnant rats elicits severe pre-eclampsia-like symptoms. These two anti-angiogenic factors are increased dramatically prior to the clinical onset of pre-eclampsia and are quite possibly the 'final common pathway' responsible for the accompanying signs of hypertension and proteinuria as they can be reversed by VEGF administration in animal models. HO-1 (haem oxygenase-1), an anti-inflammatory enzyme, and its metabolite, CO (carbon monoxide), exert protective effects in several organs against oxidative stimuli. In a landmark publication, we showed that the HO-1 pathway inhibits sFlt-1 and sEng in cultured cells and human placental tissue explants. Both CO and NO (nitric oxide) promote vascular homoeostasis and vasodilatation, and activation of VEGFR-1 or VEGFR-2 induced eNOS (endothelial nitric oxide synthase) phosphorylation, NO release and HO-1 expression. Our studies established the HO-1/CO pathway as a negative regulator of cytokine-induced sFlt-1 and sEng release and eNOS as a positive regulator of VEGF-mediated vascular morphogenesis. These findings provide compelling evidence for a protective role of HO-1 in pregnancy and identify it as a target for the treatment of pre-eclampsia. Any agent that is known to up-regulate HO-1, such as statins, may have potential as a therapy. Any intervention achieving even a modest prolongation of pregnancy or amelioration of the condition could have a significant beneficial health impact worldwide.
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PMID:Can the biology of VEGF and haem oxygenases help solve pre-eclampsia? 1990 54

We investigated the role of heme oxygenase (HO), adiponectin, and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) in uninephrectomized (UnX) deoxycorticosterone-acetate (DOCA)-salt hypertensive rats, a volume-overload model characterized by elevated endothelin-1 (ET-1), mineralocorticoid-induced oxidative/inflammatory insults, fibrosis, hypertrophy, and severe renal histopathological lesions that closely mimic end-stage renal disease (ESRD). HO was enhanced with heme arginate (HA) or blocked with chromium mesoporphyrin (CrMP). Histological, morphological/morphometrical, quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, Western blot, enzyme immunoassay, and spectrophotometric analysis were used. Our experimental design included the following groups of rats: A, controls [surgery-free Sprague-Dawley, UnX-sham, UnX-salt (0.9% NaCl + 0.2% KCl), and UnX-DOCA]; B, UnX-DOCA-salt hypertensive; C, UnX-DOCA-salt + HA; D, UnX-DOCA-salt + HA + CrMP; E, UnX-DOCA-salt + CrMP; F, UnX-DOCA-salt + captopril; G, UnX-DOCA-salt + L-arginine; H, UnX-DOCA-salt + spironolactone; and I, UnX-DOCA-salt + vehicle. HA lowered blood pressure and abated kidney hypertrophy and renal lesions, including glomerulosclerosis, tubular dilation, tubular cast formation, interstitial mononuclear cell infiltration, glomerular hypertrophy, and renal-arteriolar thickening in UnX-DOCA hypertension. Correspondingly, HO activity, adiponectin, adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK), ANP, cGMP, antioxidants such as bilirubin, ferritin, superoxide dismutase, and catalase, and total antioxidant capacity were increased, whereas ET-1, transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta), fibronectin, and 8-isoprostane were abated. These were accompanied by reduced proteinuria/albuminuria, but increased creatinine clearance. Interestingly, HA was more renoprotective than sipronolactone, L-arginine, and captopril, whereas the HO blocker CrMP exacerbated oxidative injury, aggravating renal lesions and function. Because 8-isoprostane stimulates ET-1 to potentiate oxidative stress and fibrosis, up-regulating HO-1 enhanced tissue antioxidant status alongside cellular targets such as adiponectin, AMPK, ANP, and cGMP to suppress ET-1, TGF-beta, and fibronectin with a corresponding decline of renal lesions, proteinuria/albuminuria, and thus improved renal function. The potent renoprotection of HA could be explored to combat renal hypertrophy and histopathological lesions characteristic of ESRD.
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PMID:Heme arginate therapy enhanced adiponectin and atrial natriuretic peptide, but abated endothelin-1 with attenuation of kidney histopathological lesions in mineralocorticoid-induced hypertension. 2039 17


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