| Literature DB >> 35513740 |
Maria Bartosova1, Sotirios G Zarogiannis1,2, Claus Peter Schmitt3.
Abstract
Children with chronic kidney disease (CKD) suffer from inflammation and reactive metabolite-induced stress, which massively accelerates tissue and vascular aging. Peritoneal dialysis (PD) is the preferred dialysis mode in children, but currently used PD fluids contain far supraphysiological glucose concentrations for fluid and toxin removal and glucose degradation products (GDP). While the peritoneal membrane of children with CKD G5 exhibits only minor alterations, PD fluids trigger numerous molecular cascades resulting in major peritoneal membrane inflammation, hypervascularization, and fibrosis, with distinct molecular and morphological patterns depending on the GDP content of the PD fluid used. PD further aggravates systemic vascular disease. The systemic vascular aging process is particularly pronounced when PD fluids with high GDP concentrations are used. GDP induce endothelial junction disintegration, apoptosis, fibrosis, and intima thickening. This review gives an overview on the molecular mechanisms of peritoneal and vascular transformation and strategies to improve peritoneal and vascular health in patients on PD.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic kidney disease; Endothelial; Glucose degradation products; Mesothelial; Peritoneal dialysis; Peritoneal membrane; Vascular disease
Year: 2022 PMID: 35513740 PMCID: PMC9072612 DOI: 10.1186/s40348-022-00141-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Pediatr ISSN: 2194-7791
Overview on peritoneal histomorphology in children with normal renal function and chronic kidney disease grade 5 and in children on peritoneal dialysis (PD) with PD fluids containing low and high concentrations of glucose degradation products (GDP). EMT epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition
| Health | CKD G5 | Low GDP PD | High GDP PD |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intact mesothelial monolayer | Mesothelium largely preserved | Reduced mesothelial cell coverage | More mesothelial cell loss compared to low GDP PD |
| Three layers containing blood, lymphatic vessels, and nerves | Vessel density mildly increased | Major and diffuse increase in submesothelial vessel density within few months of PD | Less submesothelial angiogenesis |
| Age-dependent vascularization and submesothelial thickness | Isolated submesothelial inflammatory cells, sparse EMT cells | Major submesothelial inflammatory cell invasion, inflammatory cytokines. Some EMT cells | Less submesothelial inflammatory cell invasion, less cytokine induction, but pronounced EMT |
| Slow but steady increase in submesothelial fibrosis | More pronounced submesothelial fibrosis | ||
| Moderate signs of vasculopathy | Dialytic glucose exposure-related vascular complement activation | Increased vascular AGE deposition, GDP exposure-related endothelial cell apoptosis, junction disruption, and endothelial cell loss. More lumen narrowing (intima thickening) |
Fig. 1Peritoneal dialysis associated local and systemic damage and protective strategies. Reactive metabolites accumulating with chronic kidney disease combined with the unphysiological composition of current PD fluids exert major local peritoneal and systemic damage, which compromise PD long-term function and contribute to accelerated patient aging. Strategies to mitigate these PD-related sequelae are given in the lower box; in italic strategies currently under development. AA, amino acids; AGEs, advanced glycation endproducts; AlaGln, alanyl-glutamine; Angp1/2, angiopoietin 1/2; CASP-3, caspase; CRYAB, crystallin alpha B; CTGF, connective tissue growth factor; EndMT, endothelial-mesenchymal transition; GDP, glucose degradation products; GSK3ß, glycogen synthase kinase-3 beta; IL, interleukin; LiCl, lithium chloride; LMNA, lamin A; MMPs, metalloproteinases; MMT, mesothelial-mesenchymal transition; ROS, reactive oxygen species; TCC, terminal complement complex; TGF-ß, transforming growth factor ß; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor α; VE-cadherin, vascular endothelial cadherin; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; ZO-1, zonula occludens 1