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Peritoneal Dialysis Fluid Supplementation with Alanyl-Glutamine Attenuates Conventional Dialysis Fluid-Mediated Endothelial Cell Injury by Restoring Perturbed Cytoprotective Responses

Authors :
Rebecca Herzog
Maria Bartosova
Silvia Tarantino
Anja Wagner
Markus Unterwurzacher
Juan Manuel Sacnun
Anton M. Lichtenauer
Lilian Kuster
Betti Schaefer
Seth L. Alper
Christoph Aufricht
Claus Peter Schmitt
Klaus Kratochwill
Source :
Biomolecules, Vol 10, Iss 12, p 1678 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Long-term clinical outcome of peritoneal dialysis (PD) depends on adequate removal of small solutes and water. The peritoneal endothelium represents the key barrier and peritoneal transport dysfunction is associated with vascular changes. Alanyl-glutamine (AlaGln) has been shown to counteract PD-induced deteriorations but the effect on vascular changes has not yet been elucidated. Using multiplexed proteomic and bioinformatic analyses we investigated the molecular mechanisms of vascular pathology in-vitro (primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells, HUVEC) and ex-vivo (arterioles of patients undergoing PD) following exposure to PD-fluid. An overlap of 1813 proteins (40%) of over 3100 proteins was identified in both sample types. PD-fluid treatment significantly altered 378 in endothelial cells and 192 in arterioles. The HUVEC proteome resembles the arteriolar proteome with expected sample specific differences of mainly immune system processes only present in arterioles and extracellular region proteins primarily found in HUVEC. AlaGln-addition to PD-fluid revealed 359 differentially abundant proteins and restored the molecular process landscape altered by PD fluid. This study provides evidence on validity and inherent limitations of studying endothelial pathomechanisms in-vitro compared to vascular ex-vivo findings. AlaGln could reduce PD-associated vasculopathy by reducing endothelial cellular damage, restoring perturbed abundances of pathologically important proteins and enriching protective processes.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2218273X
Volume :
10
Issue :
12
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Biomolecules
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8f17bc687ed9425b8b701a9d87f3e2bd
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/biom10121678