1. Therapeutic Potential of Extracellular Vesicles in Hypertension-Associated Kidney Disease
- Author
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Olga Martinez-Arroyo, Raquel Cortés, Josep Redon, and Ana Ortega
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Cell type ,Hypertension, Renal ,Cell ,Inflammation ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Exosomes ,Extracellular Vesicles ,03 medical and health sciences ,Drug Delivery Systems ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fibrosis ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Endothelial dysfunction ,Kidney ,Nephritis ,business.industry ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,medicine.disease ,Microvesicles ,MicroRNAs ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cancer research ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Biomarkers ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Hypertension-mediated organ damage frequently includes renal function decline in which several mechanisms are involved. The present review outlines the state of the art on extracellular vesicles in hypertension and hypertension-related renal damage. Emerging evidence indicates that extracellular vesicles, small vesicles secreted by most cell types and body fluids, are involved in cell-to-cell communication and are key players mediating biological processes such as inflammation, endothelial dysfunction or fibrosis, mechanisms present the onset and progression of hypertension-associated kidney disease. We address the potential use of extracellular vesicles as markers of hypertension-mediated kidney damage severity and their application as therapeutic agents in hypertension-associated renal damage. The capacity of exosomes to deliver a wide variety of cargos to the target cell efficiently makes them a potential drug delivery system for treatment of renal diseases.
- Published
- 2021
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