| Literature DB >> 28244440 |
Keisuke Kitahara1, Chiya Numako1, Yasuko Terada2, Kiyohumi Nitta2, Yoshiya Shimada3, Shino Homma-Takeda3.
Abstract
The kidney is the critical target of uranium exposure because uranium accumulates in the proximal tubules and causes tubular damage, but the chemical nature of uranium in kidney, such as its chemical status in the toxic target site, is poorly understood. Micro-X-ray absorption fine-structure (µXAFS) analysis was used to examine renal thin sections of rats exposed to uranyl acetate. The U LIII-edge X-ray absorption near-edge structure spectra of bulk renal specimens obtained at various toxicological phases were similar to that of uranyl acetate: their edge position did not shift compared with that of uranyl acetate (17.175 keV) although the peak widths for some kidney specimens were slightly narrowed. µXAFS measurements of spots of concentrated uranium in the micro-regions of the proximal tubules showed that the edge jump slightly shifted to lower energy. The results suggest that most uranium accumulated in kidney was uranium (VI) but a portion might have been biotransformed in rats exposed to uranyl acetate.Entities:
Keywords: elemental mapping; kidney; uranium; µXAFS
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28244440 PMCID: PMC5330292 DOI: 10.1107/S1600577517001850
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Uranium concentrations of the uranium-bound functionalized particles
| Sample | Uranium concentration (µg g−1) |
|---|---|
| Cellulose phosphate | 15970 |
| Si-TAAcOH | 149000 |
| Si-Cysteine | 77640 |
| Si-Amine | 37400 |
| Si-DMT | 87530 |
| Si-Imidazole | 74440 |
| Si-Thiol | 22500 |
Figure 1Uranium L III-edge XANES spectra of the comparative samples. The spectra were normalized to equal intensity at 17250 eV.
Figure 2U L III-edge κ3-weighted EXAFS data (a) and the corresponding Fourier transforms (b).
EXAFS structural parameters of the comparative samples
Errors in distances are ±0.02 Å. Errors in coordination numbers are ±25% and standard deviations as estimated by EXAFSPAK are given in brackets.
| Sample | Shell |
|
| Debye–Wallerfactor (Å2) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (CH3COO)2UO2 | Oax | 2 | 1.76 (1) | 0.06 (1) | 2.49 |
| Oaq | 2.68 (1) | 2.38 (4) | 0.01 (1) | ||
| Cellulose phosphate | Oax | 2 | 1.79 (1) | 0.03 (1) | 0.29 |
| Oaq | 3.32 (1) | 2.29 (2) | 0.07 (0) | ||
| Si-TAAcOH | Oax | 2 | 1.80 (1) | 0.04 (1) | 1.72 |
| Oaq | 4.63 (4) | 2.20 (1) | 0.15 (0) | ||
| Si-Cysteine | Oax | 2 | 1.79 (1) | 0.09 (1) | 0.07 |
| Oaq | 2.08 (1) | 2.11 (3) | 0.08 (0) | ||
| Si-Amine | Oax | 2 | 1.81 (1) | 0.04 (1) | 0.07 |
| N | 3.34 (2) | 2.38 (7) | 0.01 (0) | ||
| Si-DMT | Oax | 2 | 1.80 (1) | 0.07 (2) | 0.18 |
| N | 2.12 (2) | 2.19 (4) | 0.06 (0) | ||
| Si-Imidazole | Oax | 2 | 1.82 (1) | 0.07 (2) | 2.36 |
| N | 2.83 (1) | 2.13 (3) | 0.06 (0) | ||
| Si-Thiol | Oax | 2 | 1.80 (1) | 0.02 (3) | 0.94 |
| S | 1.96 (1) | 2.50 (2) | 0.01 (0) |
Mean renal uranium concentrations after uranyl acetate administration (mean ± standard deviation for three animals)
| Adult | Prepubertal | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Days after administration | Phase of toxicity | Low dose (0.5 mg kg−1) | High dose (2 mg kg−1) | Low dose (0.5 mg kg−1) | High dose (2 mg kg−1) | |
| 1 | Initial | 12.2 ± 0.9 | 42.6 ± 2.3 | 7.23 ± 1.99 | 22.7 ± 0.5 | |
| 3 | Middle | 8.90 ± 1.14 | 31.5 ± 2.9 | 3.47 ± 0.35 | 9.79 ± 0.44 | |
| 15 | Late | 3.02 ± 0.33 | 18.6 ± 1.6 | – | – | |
Figure 3Uranium L III-edge XANES spectra of rat kidney by bulk kidney measurements. (a) Renal section from a prepubartal rat at the middle phase after uranium exposure at the high dose (day 3 post-injection, 2 mg kg−1 body weight). (b–d) Renal section from an adult rat at the initial phase at the low dose [(b) day 1 post-injection, 0.5 mg kg−1 body weight], the middle phase [(c) day 3 post-injection] and the late phase [(d) day 15 post-injection] at the high dose (2 mg kg−1 body weight). The mean renal uranium concentrations of (a), (b), (c) and (d) were 10.2 µg g−1, 12.9 µg g−1, 34.4 µg g−1 and 17.5 µg g−1, respectively.
Figure 4Uranium distribution in kidney and uranium L III-edge XANES spectra of spots of concentrated uranium in the proximal tubules. The renal section was obtained from an adult rat at the middle phase after uranium exposure at the low dose (day 3 post-injection, 0.5 mg kg−1 body weight). (a) Diagram of the analyzed area of the renal specimen. (b, d, f) Serial-section stained using hematoxylin and eosin. (c) Uranium imaging (150 × 50 steps at 20 µm per step, beam size 1 µm × 1 µm). (e) High-resolution uranium imaging of the boxed area in (b) and (c) (100 × 50 steps at 10 µm per step, beam size 1 µm × 1 µm). (g) High-resolution uranium imaging of the boxed area in (d) and (e) (75 × 75 steps at 2 µm per step, beam size 1 µm × 1 µm). Here, point a indicates the first-highest uranium concentrated spot (1114 µg g−1) and point b indicates the second-highest uranium concentrated spot (948 µg g−1) in the analysed area. The periphery of the renal cortex in all images is shown on the right-hand side. The mean renal uranium concentration was 8.46 µg g−1. (h) Uranium L III-edge XANES spectra of spots of concentrated uranium; graph a is for position a and graph b is for position b in panel (g).