| Literature DB >> 31723053 |
Kentaro Fujii1, Akiko Kubo2, Kazutoshi Miyashita1, Masaaki Sato1, Aika Hagiwara1, Hiroyuki Inoue1, Masaki Ryuzaki1, Masanori Tamaki1,3, Takako Hishiki2,4, Noriyo Hayakawa4, Yasuaki Kabe2, Hiroshi Itoh1, Makoto Suematsu2.
Abstract
Although oxidative stress plays central roles in postischemic renal injury, region-specific alterations in energy and redox metabolism caused by short-duration ischemia remain unknown. Imaging mass spectrometry enabled us to reveal spatial heterogeneity of energy and redox metabolites in the postischemic murine kidney. After 10-minute ischemia and 24-hour reperfusion (10mIR), in the cortex and outer stripes of the outer medulla, ATP substantially decreased, but not in the inner stripes of the outer medulla and inner medulla. 10mIR caused renal injury with elevation of fractional excretion of sodium, although histological damage by oxidative stress was limited. Ischemia-induced NADH elevation in the cortex indicated prolonged production of reactive oxygen species by xanthine oxidase (XOD). However, consumption of reduced glutathione after reperfusion suggested the amelioration of oxidative stress. An XOD inhibitor, febuxostat, which blocks the degradation pathway of adenine nucleotides, promoted ATP recovery and exerted renoprotective effects in the postischemic kidney. Because effects of febuxostat were canceled by silencing of the hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase 1 gene in cultured tubular cells, mechanisms for the renoprotective effects appear to involve the purine salvage pathway, which uses hypoxanthine to resynthesize adenine nucleotides, including ATP. These findings suggest a novel therapeutic approach for acute ischemia/reperfusion renal injury with febuxostat through salvaging high-energy adenine nucleotides.Entities:
Keywords: Drug therapy; Nephrology; Therapeutics
Year: 2019 PMID: 31723053 PMCID: PMC6948864 DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.124816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JCI Insight ISSN: 2379-3708