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Query: UMLS:C0155339 (
Brown
)
12,436
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Oxidative stress is important in the pathogenesis of
renal ischemia
-reperfusion (IR) injury; however whether imbalances in reactive oxygen production and disposal account for susceptibility to injury is unclear. The purpose of this study was to compare necrosis, apoptosis, and oxidative stress in IR-resistant
Brown
Norway rats vs. IR-susceptible Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats in an in vivo model of renal IR injury. As superoxide (O (2) (.-) ) interacts with nitric oxide (NO) to form peroxynitrite, inducible NO synthase (iNOS) and nitrotyrosine were also examined. Renal IR was induced in SD and BN rats by bilateral clamping of renal arteries for 45 min followed by reperfusion for 24 h (SD 24 and BN 24, respectively). BN rats were resistant to renal IR injury as evidenced by lower plasma creatinine and decreased acute tubular necrosis. TUNEL staining analysis demonstrated significantly decreased apoptosis in the BN rats vs. SD rats after IR. Following IR, O (2) (.-) levels were also significantly lower in renal tissue of BN rats vs. SD rats (P < 0.05) in conjunction with a preservation of the O (2) (.-) dismutating protein, CuZn superoxide dismutase (CuZn SOD) (P < 0.05). This was accompanied by an overall decrease in 4-hydroxynonenal adducts in the BN but not SD rats after IR. BN rats also displayed lower iNOS expression (P < 0.05) resulting in lower tissue NO levels and decreased nitrotyrosine formation (P < 0.01) following IR. Collectively these results show that the resistance of the BN rat to renal IR injury is associated with a favorable balance of oxidant production vs. oxidant removal.
...
PMID:Favorable balance of anti-oxidant/pro-oxidant systems and ablated oxidative stress in Brown Norway rats in renal ischemia-reperfusion injury. 1745 15
To investigate mechanisms conferring susceptibility or resistance to
renal ischemia
, we used two rat strains known to exhibit different responses to ischemia-reperfusion. We exposed proximal tubule cells isolated from Sprague Dawley or
Brown
Norway rats, to a protocol of hypoxia, followed by reoxygenation in vitro. The cells isolated from both rat strains exhibited comparable responses in the disruption of intercellular adhesions and cytoskeletal damage. In vivo, after 24 h of reperfusion, both strains showed similar degrees of injury. However, after 7 days of reperfusion, renal function and tubular structure almost completely recovered and inflammation resolved, but only in
Brown
Norway rats. Hypoxia-inducible factor-dependent gene expression, ERK1/2, and Akt activation were different in the two strains. Inflammatory mediators MCP-1, IL-10, INF-gamma, IL-1beta, and TNF-alpha were similarly induced at 24 h in both strains but were downregulated earlier in
Brown
Norway rats, which correlated with shorter NFkappaB activation in the kidney. Moreover, VLA-4 expression in peripheral blood lymphocytes and VCAM-1 expression in kidney tissues were initially similar at 24 h but reached basal levels earlier in
Brown
Norway rats. The faster resolution of inflammation in
Brown
Norway rats suggests that this strain might be a useful experimental model to determine the mechanisms that promote repair of
renal ischemia
-reperfusion injury.
...
PMID:Differential resolution of inflammation and recovery after renal ischemia-reperfusion injury in Brown Norway compared with Sprague Dawley rats. 2016 27
Certain determinants of ischemic resistance in the
Brown
Norway rat strain have been proposed, but no studies to date have focused on the role of the Wnt pathway in the ischemic resistance mechanism. We performed a comparative genomic study in
Brown
Norway vs. Sprague-Dawley rats. Selective manipulations of the Wnt pathway in vivo and in vitro allowed us to study whether the action of the Wnt pathway on apoptosis through the regulation of osteopontin was critical to the maintenance of inherent ischemic resistance mechanisms. The results revealed a major gene upregulation of the Wnt family in
Brown
Norway rats after
renal ischemia
-reperfusion. Manipulation of the Wnt signaling cascade by selective antibodies increased mitochondrial cytochrome c release and caspase 3 activity. The antiapoptotic role of Wnt was mediated by osteopontin, a direct Wnt target gene. Osteopontin was reduced by Wnt antibody administration in vivo, and osteopontin gene silencing in vitro significantly increased mitochondrial cytochrome c release. The overexpression of Wnt pathway genes detected in
Brown
Norway rats is critical in the maintenance of their inherent ischemic resistance. Activation of the Wnt signaling cascade reduces mitochondrial cytochrome c release and caspase 3 activity through the action of osteopontin.
...
PMID:Inhibitory action of Wnt target gene osteopontin on mitochondrial cytochrome c release determines renal ischemic resistance. 2039 2
Renal ischemia
-reperfusion injury triggers an inflammatory response associated to infiltrating macrophages which determines the further outcome of disease.
Brown
Norway rats are known to show endogenous resistance to ischemia-induced renal damage. By contrast, Sprague Dawley rats exhibit a higher susceptibility to ischemic injury. In order to ascertain cytoprotective mechanisms, we focused on the implication of lipocalin-2 protein in main resistance mechanisms in
renal ischemia
/reperfusion injury by using adoptive macrophage administration, genetically modified ex vivo either to overexpress or to knockdown lipocalin-2. In vitro experiments with bone marrow-derived macrophages both from
Brown
Norway rats and from Sprague Dawley rats under hypoxic conditions showed endogenous differences regarding cytokine and lipocalin-2 expression profile in the two strains. Most interestingly, we observed that macrophages of the resistant strain express significantly more lipocalin-2. In vivo studies showed that tubular epithelial cell apoptosis and renal injury significantly increased and reparative markers decreased in
Brown
Norway rats after injection of lipocalin-2-knockdown macrophages, while the administration of lipocalin-2-overexpressing cells significantly decreased Sprague Dawley susceptibility. These data point to a crucial role of macrophage-derived lipocalin-2 in endogenous cytoprotective mechanisms. We conclude that expression of lipocalin-2 in tissue-infiltrating macrophages is pivotal for kidney-intrinsic cytoprotective pathways during ischemia reperfusion injury.
...
PMID:Macrophage-derived Lipocalin-2 contributes to ischemic resistance mechanisms by protecting from renal injury. 2691 37
We previously demonstrated that kidney peptidylarginine deiminase-4 (PAD4) plays a critical role in ischemic acute kidney injury (AKI) in mice by promoting renal tubular inflammation and neutrophil infiltration (Ham A, Rabadi M, Kim M,
Brown
KM, Ma Z, D'Agati V, Lee HT. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 307: F1052-F1062, 2014). Although the role of PAD4 in granulocytes including neutrophils is well known, we surprisingly observed profound renal proximal tubular PAD4 induction after
renal ischemia
-reperfusion (I/R) injury. Here we tested the hypothesis that renal proximal tubular PAD4 rather than myeloid-cell lineage PAD4 plays a critical role in exacerbating ischemic AKI by utilizing mice lacking PAD4 in renal proximal tubules (PAD4
ff
PEPCK Cre mice) or in granulocytes (PAD4
ff
LysM Cre mice). Mice lacking renal proximal tubular PAD4 were significantly protected against ischemic AKI compared with wild-type (PAD4
ff
) mice. Surprisingly, mice lacking PAD4 in myeloid cells were also protected against renal I/R injury although this protection was less compared with renal proximal tubular PAD4-deficient mice. Renal proximal tubular PAD4-deficient mice had profoundly reduced renal tubular apoptosis, whereas myeloid-cell PAD4-deficient mice showed markedly reduced renal neutrophil infiltration. Taken together, our studies suggest that both renal proximal tubular PAD4 as well as myeloid-cell lineage PAD4 play a critical role in exacerbating ischemic AKI. Renal proximal tubular PAD4 appears to contribute to ischemic AKI by promoting renal tubular apoptosis, whereas myeloid-cell PAD4 is preferentially involved in promoting neutrophil infiltration to the kidney and inflammation after renal I/R.
...
PMID:Divergent roles for kidney proximal tubule and granulocyte PAD4 in ischemic AKI. 2935 26