| Literature DB >> 32015680 |
Chao Zhang1,2, Sunil K George1, Rongpei Wu1,3, Parth Udayan Thakker4, Mehran Abolbashari1, Tae-Hyoung Kim1,5, In Kap Ko1, Yuanyuan Zhang1, Yinghao Sun2, John Jackson1, Sang Jin Lee1, James J Yoo1, Anthony Atala1.
Abstract
Purpose: Drug-induced nephrotoxicity can occur in patients with pre-existing renal dysfunction or renal ischemia, potentially leading to chronic kidney disease (CKD) and end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Prompt treatment of CKD and the related side effects is critical in preventing progression to ESRD. The goal of this study was to demonstrate the therapeutic potential of urine-derived stem cells (USC) to treat chronic kidney disease-induced by nephrotoxic drugs and renal ischemia. Materials and methods: Human USC were collected, expanded and characterized by flow cytometry. A CKD model was induced by creating an ischemia-reperfusion injury and gentamicin administration. Twenty-eight adult immunodeficient rats were divided into three groups: PBS-treated group (n=9), USC-treated group (n=9), and sham group with age-matched control animals (n=10). Cell suspension of USC (5 x 106 / 100µl / kidney) or PBS was injected bilaterally into the renal parenchyma 9 weeks after CKD model creation. Renal function was evaluated by collection blood and urine samples to measure serum creatinine and glomerulus filtration rate. The kidneys were harvested 12 weeks after cell injection. Histologically, the extent of glomerulosclerosis and tubular atrophy, the amount of collagen deposition, interstitial fibrosis, inflammatory monocyte infiltration, and expression of transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGF-ß1), and superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD-1) were examined.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic Kidney Disease; Kidney degeneration; Urine-derived Stem Cell
Year: 2020 PMID: 32015680 PMCID: PMC6990904 DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.37550
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Sci ISSN: 1449-2288 Impact factor: 6.580
Antibodies, mediums, and serums used in this study.
| Items | Antibody | Type | Source | Catalog No. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD24 | FITC-conjugate | BD | 560992 | |
| CD29 | PE-conjugated | BD | 555443 | |
| CD31 | FITC-conjugated | BD | 560984 | |
| CD34 | APC-conjugated | BD | 560940 | |
| CD44 | PE-conjugated | BD | 550989 | |
| CD45 | APC-conjugated | BD | 340943 | |
| CD73 | PE-conjugated | BD | 550257 | |
| CD90 | APC-conjugated | BD | 561971 | |
| CD105 | PE-conjugated | BD | 560839 | |
| CD146 | PE-conjugated | BD | 550315 | |
| SSEA4 | PE-conjugated | BD | 560128 | |
| STRO-1 | FITC-conjugated | Biolegend | 340105 | |
| HLA | Rabbit monoclonal | Abcam | 52922 | |
| CD68 | Mouse monoclonal | AbD Serotec | MCA341R | |
| TGF-ßI | Rabbit monoclonal | Abcam | 170874 | |
| SOD-1 | Rabbit monoclonal | Abcam | EP1727Y | |
| KSFM | Gibco | 17005042 | ||
| DMEM | Gibco | 41966-052 | ||
| Fetal bovine serum | Gibco | 26140079 | ||
Pathohistological changes in kidney of USC-treated rats, compared to those in controls 12 weeks after cell therapy.
| Pathological | PBS-treated | USC-treated | Age-matched |
|---|---|---|---|
| n=9 | n=9 | n=10 | |
| Ratio of normal nephrons (%) (Fig. | 38% (4.0±2.0) | 60% (6.33±2.1) | 100% (10.6±2.2) |
| Ratio of abnormal nephrons (%) (Fig. | 62% (6.6±2.0) | 40% (4.27±2.1) | 0% (0.0±0.0) |
| Ratio of collagen deposition (%) ( Fig. | 322% (16.2±4.7) | 152% (7.6±3.3) | 100% (5.0±2.0) |
| Ratio of inflammatory (%) (Fig. | 435% (8.7±2.5) | 235% (4.7±2.1) | 100% (2.0±1.1) |
| Increased interstitial fibrosis (cortex vs. medulla) (%) (Fig. | 158% (1.22±0.1) | 123% (0.95±0.09) | 100% (0.77±0.05) |
Abbreviations: PBS- phosphate buffered saline; USC- urine-derived stem cells.
Notes: Glomerular sclerosis, dilated or atrophic renal tubule structure; Inflammatory response - measured by monocyte infiltration. One-way ANOVA statistical analysis was formed among three groups, based on the average relative intensity of ten fields per sample, each taken at a 200x magnification for immunostaining. Percentages were relative to AMC. All values are reported as mean ± SEM. *All differences listed in this table were statistically significant between the PBS, USC-treated groups, and AMC, p<0.05 or p<0.01.