| Literature DB >> 15689404 |
Masayoshi Iwasaki1, Yasushi Adachi, Keizo Minamino, Yasuhiro Suzuki, Yuming Zhang, Mitsuhiko Okigaki, Keiji Nakano, Yasushi Koike, Jianfeng Wang, Hiromi Mukaide, Shigeru Taketani, Yasukiyo Mori, Hakuo Takahashi, Toshiji Iwasaka, Susumu Ikehara.
Abstract
Cisplatin, which is a broadly used anticancer drug, is widely known to induce acute renal failure as a result of renal tubular injury. This article examines whether G-CSF and/or M-CSF rescues mice from renal failure induced by cisplatin. BALB/c mice received intraperitoneal injections with or without G-CSF and/or M-CSF for 5 d (from day -5 to day -1). The day after the last injection of G-CSF and/or M-CSF (day 0), the mice received an intraperitoneal injection of cisplatin. When pretreated with G-CSF or G-CSF + M-CSF, the mice showed longer survival and lower serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen levels than mice that had been received injections of M-CSF or saline. Histologically, pretreatment with G-CSF or G-CSF + M-CSF attenuated the damage to renal tubules induced by cisplatin. BALB/c mice that had received a transplant of bone marrow cells of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)-transgenic mice ([EGFP-->BALB/c] mice) were treated with or without G-CSF and/or M-CSF, followed by injection of cisplatin as well as above. [EGFP-->BALB/c] mice that were treated with G-CSF or G-CSF + M-CSF showed a significantly higher number of EGFP(+) tubular epithelial cells in the kidney than mice that were treated with only M-CSF or saline. These results suggest that bone marrow cells mobilized by G-CSF accelerate the improvement in renal functions and prevent the renal tubular injury induced by cisplatin and that M-CSF enhances the effects of G-CSF.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15689404 DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2004010067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Soc Nephrol ISSN: 1046-6673 Impact factor: 10.121