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Iron deficiency exacerbates cisplatin- or rhabdomyolysis-induced acute kidney injury through promoting iron-catalyzed oxidative damage

Authors :
Wenjun Shang
Jonathan Barasch
Shougang Zhuang
Fenyong Sun
Juanlian Zhang
Xiu Liang
Zhigang Wang
Shifeng Zhao
Qiuhui Pan
Andong Qiu
Xudong Zhao
Xueqiao Wang
Xiaoqing Zheng
Source :
Free Radic Biol Med
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Iron deficiency is the most common micronutrient deficiency worldwide. While iron deficiency is known to suppress embryonic organogenesis, its effect on the adult organ in the context of clinically relevant damage has not been considered. Here we report that iron deficiency is a risk factor for nephrotoxic intrinsic acute kidney injury of the nephron (iAKI). Iron deficiency exacerbated cisplatin-induced iAKI by markedly increasing non-heme catalytic iron and Nox4 protein which together catalyze production of hydroxyl radicals followed by protein and DNA oxidation, apoptosis and ferroptosis. Crosstalk between non-heme catalytic iron/Nox4 and downstream oxidative damage generated a mutual amplification cycle that facilitated rapid progression of cisplatin-induced iAKI. Iron deficiency also exacerbated a second model of iAKI, rhabdomyolysis, via increasing catalytic heme-iron. Heme-iron induced lipid peroxidation and DNA oxidation by interacting with Nox4-independent mechanisms, promoting p53/p21 activity and cellular senescence. Our data suggests that correcting iron deficiency and/or targeting specific catalytic iron species are strategies to mitigate iAKI in a wide range of patients with diverse forms of kidney injury.

Details

ISSN :
18734596
Volume :
173
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Free radical biologymedicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....295d9afd47f32b01491ae29f588abcc7