Literature DB >> 18400868

AT1 blockade during lactation as a model of chronic nephropathy: mechanisms of renal injury.

Flavia Gomes Machado1, Elizabete Pereira Barros Poppi, Camilla Fanelli, Denise Maria Avancini Costa Malheiros, Roberto Zatz, Clarice Kazue Fujihara.   

Abstract

Suppression of the renin-angiotensin system during lactation causes irreversible renal structural changes. In this study we investigated 1) the time course and the mechanisms underlying the chronic kidney disease caused by administration of the AT(1) receptor blocker losartan during lactation, and 2) whether this untoward effect can be used to engender a new model of chronic kidney disease. Male Munich-Wistar pups were divided into two groups: C, whose mothers were untreated, and L(Lact), whose mothers received oral losartan (250 mg.kg(-1).day(-1)) during the first 20 days after delivery. At 3 mo of life, both nephron number and the glomerular filtration rate were reduced in L(Lact) rats, whereas glomerular pressure was elevated. Unselective proteinuria and decreased expression of the zonula occludens-1 protein were also observed, along with modest glomerulosclerosis, significant interstitial expansion and inflammation, and wide glomerular volume variation, with a stable subpopulation of exceedingly small glomeruli. In addition, the urine osmolality was persistently lower in L(Lact) rats. At 10 mo of age, L(Lact) rats exhibited systemic hypertension, heavy albuminuria, substantial glomerulosclerosis, severe renal interstitial expansion and inflammation, and creatinine retention. Conclusions are that 1) oral losartan during lactation can be used as a simple and easily reproducible model of chronic kidney disease in adult life, associated with low mortality and no arterial hypertension until advanced stages; and 2) the mechanisms involved in the progression of renal injury in this model include glomerular hypertension, glomerular hypertrophy, podocyte injury, and interstitial inflammation.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18400868     DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.00020.2008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Renal Physiol        ISSN: 1522-1466


  4 in total

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3.  Imbalance of Pro- and Anti-Angiogenic Factors Due to Maternal Vitamin D Deficiency Causes Renal Microvasculature Alterations Affecting the Adult Kidney Function.

Authors:  Lucas Ferreira de Almeida; Heloísa Della Coletta Francescato; Jose Antunes-Rodrigues; Francisco Jose Albuquerque de Paula; Cleonice Giovanni Alves da Silva; Roberto Silva Costa; Terezila Machado Coimbra
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4.  Calcitriol reduces kidney development disorders in rats provoked by losartan administration during lactation.

Authors:  Lucas Ferreira de Almeida; Heloísa Della Coletta Francescato; Cleonice Giovanini Alves da Silva; Roberto Silva Costa; Terezila Machado Coimbra
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-09-13       Impact factor: 4.379

  4 in total

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