| Literature DB >> 26550568 |
Timothy Bowen1, Soma Meran1, Aled P Williams1, Lucy J Newbury1, Matthias Sauter2, Thomas Sitter3.
Abstract
Hyaluronan (HA) is a ubiquitous extracellular matrix glycosaminoglycan composed of repeated disaccharide units of alternating D-glucuronic acid and D-N-acetylglucosamine residues linked via alternating β-1,4 and β-1,3 glycosidic bonds. HA is synthesized in humans by HA synthase (HAS) enzymes 1, 2, and 3, which are encoded by the corresponding HAS genes. Previous in vitro studies have shown characteristic changes in HAS expression and increased HA synthesis in response to wounding and proinflammatory cytokines in human peritoneal mesothelial cells. In addition, in vivo models and human peritoneal biopsy samples have provided evidence of changes in HA metabolism in the fibrosis that at present accompanies peritoneal dialysis treatment. This review discusses these published observations and how they might contribute to improvement in peritoneal dialysis.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26550568 PMCID: PMC4621352 DOI: 10.1155/2015/427038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
| Study | Organism | HA concentration and application | HA Effects on UF | Other HA Effects |
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| Wang et al., 1997 [ | Rat | Single 4 h dwell with HA 0.005% and 0.01% | Increased UF, mainly through decreased peritoneal fluid absorption | Increased peritoneal clearance of urea |
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| Wang et al., 1999 [ | Rat | Single 4 h dwell with HA 0.01% | Increased net UF, mainly by decreased peritoneal fluid absorption | Increased peritoneal clearance of urea. HA may prevent decreased net UF caused by an increased dialysate fill volume |
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| Wang et al., 1999 [ | Rat | Single 4 h dwell with HA in various concentrations (0.01–0.5%) and molecular weights (MW; 85 kDa–4 MDa) | Increased size and concentration of HA resulted in decreased peritoneal fluid absorption. Low concentrations of high MW HA might decrease transcapillary UF rate | |
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Połubinska et al., 2000 [ | Rat | High MW HA 10 mg/dL twice daily for 4 weeks | Total drained volume in HA group was significantly higher (positive net UF in HA group versus negative net UF in control group) | Clearance of total protein and albumin tended to be lower; clearance of urea and creatinine tended to be higher. Significantly decreased percentage of IP neutrophils and levels of MCP-1 and TNF- |
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| Guo et al., 2001 [ | Rat | 0.025% HA in a 4 h dwell for 1 week | Decreased peritoneal fluid absorption (similar to native animals) | Significant decrease in protein transportation rate |
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| Breborowicz et al., 2001 [ | Rat | One infusion of 10 mg/dL HA for a 1–8 h dwell | Net UF was significantly greater at 4, 6, and 8 h compared to controls | During 8 h exchange, creatinine clearance was significantly higher and total protein clearance significantly lower. After 8 h, 25.7% HA absorbed from peritoneal cavity and peritoneal tissue HA increased to 117%; plasma HA levels increased to 435%. Plasma HA normalized within 24 h in uremic and nonuremic animals |
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| Breborowicz et al., 2001 [ | Rat | Acute peritonitis induced with lipopolysaccharide; HA at 10 mg/dL; 4 and 8 h dwell | Significant reduction in loss of UF | Significantly increased creatinine clearance. Greater dialysate interferon- |
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| Moberly et al., 2003 [ | Human | Prospective randomized crossover study with 6 h application of Dianeal and Dianeal containing HA (0.1 and 0.5 g/L). 2-week washout analysed after exchange | No significant differences in net UF or peritoneal volume profiles | No adverse effects of HA |
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| Breborowicz et al., 2004 [ | Human | One 6 h dwell with 13.6 g/L glucose-based solution ±0.1 and 0.5 g/L of exogenous high MW HA. 2-week application intervals | Significant increased concentration of nitrites in HA 0.5 g/L supplemented dialysate. No difference in concentrations of MCP-1, s-ICAM1, EGF, and fibronectin | |
| Study | Organism | PD regime (not HA) | Other HA effects |
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| Wieczorowska-Tobis et al., 2004 [ | Rat | 2 daily injections of 4.25% glucose-containing PDF for 6 weeks. PDFs tested: CAPD3 (single-chamber bag, low pH, and high GDP), CAPD3 pH 7.4 (single-chamber bag, neutral pH, and high GDP), CAPD3 balance (double-chamber bag, neutral pH, and low GDP) | Reduced concentrations of protein and HA in dialysate. Introduced PD fluids with physiologic pH and low GDP level producing less irritation to the peritoneal membrane, better preserving its structural integrity |
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| Zareie et al., 2005 [ | Rat | Uraemic and control rats received daily 10 mL conventional glucose containing PD fluid, via peritoneal catheters during a 6-week period | Increased MCP-1 and HA levels in peritoneal lavage fluid |
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| Flessner et al., 2006 [ | Rat | Filtered solutions with 4% N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) or 4% glucose (G) IP injected daily in 2–300 g rats compared with controls (C). At 2 months, transport studies using chamber affixed to parietal peritoneum determined small-solute and protein mass transfer, osmotic filtration, and hydraulic flow | Tissue analysis showed treatment effects on tissue HA (microg/g: C, 962 ± 73; G, 1,169 ± 69; NAG, 1,428 ± 69; and |
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| Schilte et al., 2009 [ | Rat | Used 10 mL PD fluid daily, ±unfractionated heparin, or low MW heparin in PD fluid (1 mg/10 mL) IP via mini access port, untreated control rats. At 5 weeks, peritoneal transport was tested; tissues and peritoneal leukocytes were sampled | Increased peritoneal cell influx and HA production ( |
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| Loureiro et al., 2010 [ | Rat | Over 5 weeks, rats instilled daily using PD fluid ± BMP-7 | rhBMP-7-treatment did not significantly affect any of these processes induced by PD fluid exposure, except for a tendency to reduce HA production ( |
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| Rosengren et al., 2013 [ | Human | After 8 weeks PD, interstitial fluid (IF) from peritoneum was isolated via centrifugation; IF and plasma were analyzed for cytokine content and colloid osmotic pressure | IF colloid osmotic pressure decreased significantly in PD group, while collagen and HA content was increased |
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| Kinashi et al., 2013 [ | Human | Role of the lymphangiogenesis mediator VEGF-C analysed in human dialysate effluents, peritoneal tissues, and HPMCs | Peritoneal tissue from patients with UF failure expressed higher levels of VEGF-C, LYVE-1, and podoplanin mRNA and contained more lymphatic vessels than tissue from patients without UF failure |