1. Effect of Nephrotoxins on Tubulointerstitial Injury and NF-κB Activation in Adriamycin Nephropathy.
- Author
-
Rangan, Gopala K., Wang, Yiping, Tay, Yuet-Ching, Coombes, Jason D., and Harris, David C.H.
- Subjects
NEPHROTOXICOLOGY ,NF-kappa B ,DOXORUBICIN ,KIDNEY diseases ,KIDNEY glomerulus ,CELLS - Abstract
In a previous study we found that an episode of acute subclinical nephrotoxicity with gentamicin (G) (but not that induced by another proximal tubular cell nephrotoxin: ferric nitrilotriacetate, FeNTA), paradoxically reduced the progression of renal function and injury in uninephrectomized rats with nephrotic glomerular disease due to Adriamycin nephropathy (AN). Here, we hypothesized that subclinical exposure to G reduces early renal cortical tubulointerstitial inflammation and NF-κB activation in AN. To test this hypothesis, male Wistar rats with established AN received either G (10, 40, or 80 mg/kg by daily s.c.i. for 3 days), FeNTA (1.25, 5, or 10 mg/kg by a single i.p.i.), or vehicle (n = 8 per group), 13 to 15 days after disease induction. Although G and FeNTA caused acute tubular necrosis in a dose-dependant manner (day 17), only the highest doses (10 mg/kg and 80 mg/kg) produced an acute elevation in the serum creatinine. On day 33, chronic tubulointerstitial inflammation (tubular atrophy, interstitial ED-1 + /CD8 + cell accumulation) and NF-κB activation were exacerbated only in the groups that caused functional nephrotoxicity. These data suggest that: 1) the protective effect of subclinical G nephrotoxicity in chronic AN does not involve early changes in interstitial inflammation or NF-κB activation; and 2) a single episode of G exposure must be accompanied by clinically apparent nephrotoxicity in order to accelerate progression in a nonuremic model of chronic glomerular disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF