Literature DB >> 25173645

Myocardial infarction worsens glomerular injury and microalbuminuria in rats with pre-existing renal impairment accompanied by the activation of ER stress and inflammation.

Zhifeng Dong1, Penglong Wu, Yongguang Li, Yuan Shen, Ping Xin, Shuai Li, Zhihua Wang, Xiaoyan Dai, Wei Zhu, Meng Wei.   

Abstract

Deterioration of renal function occurs after chronic heart failure in approximately one-third of patients, particularly in those with pre-existing renal impairment such as diabetic nephropathy. Impaired renal function in these patients is always associated with a worse prognosis. However, the mechanisms underlying such deterioration of renal function are still largely unknown. In three separate protocols, we compared 1) sham operation (Ctr, n = 10) with surgically induced myocardial infarction (MI, n = 10); 2) unilateral nephrectomy (UNX, n = 10) with UNX + MI (n = 10); and 3) STZ-induced type 1 diabetes (DB, n = 10) with DB + MI (n = 10). The differences between combined injury models (UNX + MI, DB + MI) and simple MI were also examined. Renal remodeling, function, ER stress (CHOP and GRP78) and inflammation (infiltration of inflammatory cells, NF-κB p65) were evaluated 12 weeks after MI. In common SD rats, MI activated less glomerular ER stress and inflammation, resulting in a minor change of glomerular remodeling and microalbuminuria. However, MI significantly increased the glomerular expression of GRP78 and CHOP in UNX and DB rats. In addition, it also promoted the infiltration of CD4+ T cells, particularly inflammatory cytokine (IFN-γ, IL-17, IL-4)-producing CD4+ T cells, and the expression of NF-κB p65 in the glomeruli. By contrast, significant glomerular fibrosis, glomerulosclerosis, podocyte injury and microalbuminuria were found in rats with UNX + MI and DB + MI. MI significantly increased chronic glomerular injury and microalbuminuria at 12 weeks in rats with pre-existing renal impairment, i.e., UNX and DB, but not common SD rats. These changes were accompanied by increased glomerular ER stress and immune-associated inflammation.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25173645     DOI: 10.1007/s11033-014-3685-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Rep        ISSN: 0301-4851            Impact factor:   2.316


  69 in total

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Authors:  Ning Ma; Ning Xu; Dong Yin; Ping Zheng; Weiwei Liu; Guofeng Wang; Yuan Hui; Guanjun Han; Chuanhui Yang; Xingbo Cheng
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4.  Circulating microRNA-194 levels in Chinese patients with diabetic kidney disease: a case-control study.

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5.  Comparison of renal impairment post-myocardial infarction with reduced and preserved left ventricular function in rats with normal renal function.

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  5 in total

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