Literature DB >> 30029111

Silica - A trace geogenic element with emerging nephrotoxic potential.

Starlaine Mascarenhas1, Srikanth Mutnuri2, Anasuya Ganguly3.   

Abstract

Silica is a trace-geogenic compound with limited-bioavailability. It inflicts health-perils like pulmonary-silicosis and chronic kidney disease (CKD), when available via anthropogenic-disturbances. Amidst silica-imposed pathologies, pulmonary toxicological-mechanisms are well-described, ignoring the renal-pathophysiological mechanisms. Hence, the present-study aimed to elucidate cellular-cum-molecular toxicological-mechanisms underlying silica-induced renal-pathology in-vitro. Various toxicity-assessments were used to study effects of silica on the physiological-functions of HK-cells (human-kidney proximal-tubular cells - the toxin's prime target) on chronic (1-7 days) sub-toxic (80 mg/L) and toxic (100-120 mg/L) dosing. Results depicted that silica triggered dose-cum-time dependent cytotoxicity/cell-death (MTT-assay) that significantly increased on long-term dosing with ≥100 mg/L silica; establishing the nephrotoxic-potential of this dose. Contrarily, insignificant cell-death on sub-toxic (80 mg/L) dosing was attributed to rapid intracellular toxin-clearance at lower-doses preventing toxic-effects. The proximal-tubular (HK-cells) cytotoxicity was found to be primarily mediated by silica-triggered incessant oxidative-stress (elevated ROS).·This enhanced ROS inflicted severe inflammation and subsequent fibrosis, evident from increased pro-inflammatory-cum-fibrogenic cytokines generation (IL-1β, IL-2, IL-6, TNF-α and TGF-β). Simultaneously, ROS induced persistent DNA-damage (Comet-assay) that stimulated G2/M arrest for p53-mediated damage-repair, aided by checkpoint-promoter (Chk1) activation and mitotic-inducers (i.e. Cdc-25, Cdk1, cyclinB1) inhibition. However, DNA-injuries surpassed the cellular-repair, which provoked the p53-gene to induce mitochondrial-mediated apoptotic cell-death via activation of Bax, cytochrome-c and caspase-cascade (9/3). This persistent apoptotic cell-death and simultaneous incessant inflammation culminated in the development of tubular-atrophy and fibrosis, the major pathological-manifestations of CKD. These findings provided novel-insights into the pathological-mechanisms (cellular and molecular) of silica-induced CKD, inflicted on chronic toxic-dosing (≥100 mg/L).Thereby, encouraging the development of therapeutic-strategies (e.g. anti-oxidant treatment) for specific molecular-targets (e.g. ROS) to retard silica-induced CKD-progression, for reduction in the global-CKD burden.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CKD; DNA-injuries; Inflammation; Mitochondria mediated apoptosis-pathway; Oxidative-stress; Silica

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30029111     DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.07.075

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Total Environ        ISSN: 0048-9697            Impact factor:   7.963


  3 in total

Review 1.  Renal involvement in a silicosis patient - case report and literature review.

Authors:  Fei-Fei Chen; Hai-Yan Tang; Feng Yu; Cheng-Li Que; Fu-de Zhou; Su-Xia Wang; Guang-Fa Wang; Ming-Hui Zhao
Journal:  Ren Fail       Date:  2019-11       Impact factor: 2.606

Review 2.  Nanomaterials and hepatic disease: toxicokinetics, disease types, intrinsic mechanisms, liver susceptibility, and influencing factors.

Authors:  Ting Sun; Yiyuan Kang; Jia Liu; Yanli Zhang; Lingling Ou; Xiangning Liu; Renfa Lai; Longquan Shao
Journal:  J Nanobiotechnology       Date:  2021-04-16       Impact factor: 10.435

3.  Cyanidin-3-galactoside from Aronia melanocarpa ameliorates silica-induced pulmonary fibrosis by modulating the TGF-β/mTOR and NRF2/HO-1 pathways.

Authors:  Yanmin Cui; Jin Zhao; Jing Chen; Yanwen Kong; Mingyue Wang; Yan Ma; Xianjun Meng
Journal:  Food Sci Nutr       Date:  2022-03-30       Impact factor: 3.553

  3 in total

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