| Literature DB >> 26488549 |
Juan Antonio Ortega-Trejo1,2, Rosalba Pérez-Villalva1,2, Jonatan Barrera-Chimal1,2, Diego L Carrillo-Pérez2, Luis E Morales-Buenrostro2, Gerardo Gamba1,2, María Elena Flores1, Norma A Bobadilla1,2.
Abstract
We demonstrated that urinary heat shock protein of 72 KDa (Hsp72) is a sensitive biomarker for the early detection of acute kidney injury (AKI). However, whether Hsp72 induction during an AKI episode is kidney-specific is unknown, as well as, the degree of Hsp72 stability in urine samples. In rats that underwent bilateral renal ischemia and reperfusion (I/R), Hsp72 levels were evaluated in several tissues and in collected urines under different storage and temperature conditions, as well as in variable numbers of freeze-thaw cycles. The effect of room temperature and five freeze-thaw cycles on urinary Hsp72 levels was also evaluated in urine samples from AKI patients. We found that Hsp72 increased exclusively in the renal cortex of I/R group, emphasizing its performance as an AKI biomarker. Urinary-Hsp72 remained constant at room temperature (48 h), during 9 months of storage and was not affected by five freeze/thaw cycles.Entities:
Keywords: Ischemia/reperfusion; renal cortex; renal dysfunction; tubular injury
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26488549 DOI: 10.3109/1354750X.2015.1096305
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomarkers ISSN: 1354-750X Impact factor: 2.658