4-hydroxy-2-nonenal has been researched along with Proteinuria* in 10 studies
10 other study(ies) available for 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal and Proteinuria
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Attenuation of diabetic nephropathy by Sanziguben Granule inhibiting EMT through Nrf2-mediated anti-oxidative effects in streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats.
Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is an acute and serious diabetic complication characterized by renal hypertrophy and renal fibrosis with the expansion of extracellular matrices. Diabetic nephropathy has become a major cause of end-stage kidney disease. Sanziguben Granule (SZGB) is a compound prescription which has been widely applied in clinical medicine for the prevention and treatment of diabetic nephropathy as well as for acute and chronic kidney injuries. However, the mechanism of protective effects of SZGB in DN remains unclear.. In this research, we investigated the effects of SZGB on renal interstitial fibrosis, antioxidant proficiency, and apoptosis in streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats. Diabetic rats were prepared by performing a right uninephrectomy along with a single intraperitoneal injection of STZ. Rats were divided into six groups including sham, DN, SZGB-D, SZGB-Z, SZGB-G and fosinopril. SZGB and fosinopril were given to rats by gavage for 12 weeks. Samples from urine, blood and kidneys were collected for biochemical, histological, immunohistochemical and western blot analyses.. We found that rats treated with SZGB showed reduced 24-h urinary protein excretion along with reduced serum total cholesterol (TC) and triglyceride (TG) levels. SZGB was also shown to prevent the disruption of catalase activity and reduce serum urea, creatinine, and renal malondialdehyde while increasing glutathione levels. Moreover, SZGB administration markedly improved the expression levels of E-cadherin, 4-HNE, Nrf2, HO-1, and Bcl-2, while it decreased the expression levels of Vimentin, α-SMA and Cleaved caspase-3 in the kidneys of diabetic rats. The renoprotective effects of SZGB was believed to be mediated by its antioxidant capacity, and SZGB treatment attenuated renal fibrosis through stimulating the nuclear factor erythroid-2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) signaling pathway in the diabetic kidneys.. Therefore, it is suggested that SZGB can restrain epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) through stimulating the Nrf2 pathway, which improves renal interstitial fibrosis in DN. Topics: Aldehydes; Animals; Blood Glucose; Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental; Diabetic Nephropathies; Drugs, Chinese Herbal; Fibrosis; Gene Expression Regulation; Male; NF-E2-Related Factor 2; Oxidative Stress; Proteinuria; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Streptozocin | 2017 |
Oxidative/Nitrative Stress and Inflammation Drive Progression of Doxorubicin-Induced Renal Fibrosis in Rats as Revealed by Comparing a Normal and a Fibrosis-Resistant Rat Strain.
Chronic renal fibrosis is the final common pathway of end stage renal disease caused by glomerular or tubular pathologies. Genetic background has a strong influence on the progression of chronic renal fibrosis. We recently found that Rowett black hooded rats were resistant to renal fibrosis. We aimed to investigate the role of sustained inflammation and oxidative/nitrative stress in renal fibrosis progression using this new model. Our previous data suggested the involvement of podocytes, thus we investigated renal fibrosis initiated by doxorubicin-induced (5 mg/kg) podocyte damage. Doxorubicin induced progressive glomerular sclerosis followed by increasing proteinuria and reduced bodyweight gain in fibrosis-sensitive, Charles Dawley rats during an 8-week long observation period. In comparison, the fibrosis-resistant, Rowett black hooded rats had longer survival, milder proteinuria and reduced tubular damage as assessed by neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) excretion, reduced loss of the slit diaphragm protein, nephrin, less glomerulosclerosis, tubulointerstitial fibrosis and matrix deposition assessed by periodic acid-Schiff, Picro-Sirius-red staining and fibronectin immunostaining. Less fibrosis was associated with reduced profibrotic transforming growth factor-beta, (TGF-β1) connective tissue growth factor (CTGF), and collagen type I alpha 1 (COL-1a1) mRNA levels. Milder inflammation demonstrated by histology was confirmed by less monocyte chemotactic protein 1 (MCP-1) mRNA. As a consequence of less inflammation, less oxidative and nitrative stress was obvious by less neutrophil cytosolic factor 1 (p47phox) and NADPH oxidase-2 (p91phox) mRNA. Reduced oxidative enzyme expression was accompanied by less lipid peroxidation as demonstrated by 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE) and less protein nitrosylation demonstrated by nitrotyrosine (NT) immunohistochemistry and quantified by Western blot. Our results demonstrate that mediators of fibrosis, inflammation and oxidative/nitrative stress were suppressed in doxorubicin nephropathy in fibrosis-resistant Rowett black hooded rats underlying the importance of these pathomechanisms in the progression of renal fibrosis initiated by glomerular podocyte damage. Topics: Aldehydes; Animals; Body Weight; Chemokine CCL2; Connective Tissue Growth Factor; Disease Progression; Disease Resistance; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Doxorubicin; Fibrosis; Kidney; Male; Membrane Proteins; Oxidative Stress; Proteinuria; Rats; Reactive Nitrogen Species; Species Specificity; Transforming Growth Factor beta1; Tyrosine | 2015 |
Effect of combining an ACE inhibitor and a VDR activator on glomerulosclerosis, proteinuria, and renal oxidative stress in uremic rats.
Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors ameliorate the progression of renal disease. In combination with vitamin D receptor activators, they provide additional benefits. In the present study, uremic (U) rats were treated as follows: U+vehicle (UC), U+enalapril (UE; 25 mg/l in drinking water), U+paricalcitol (UP; 0.8 μg/kg ip, 3 × wk), or U+enalapril+paricalcitol (UEP). Despite hypertension in UP rats, proteinuria decreased by 32% vs. UC rats. Enalapril alone, or in combination with paricalcitol, further decreased proteinuria (≈70%). Glomerulosclerosis and interstitial infiltration increased in UC rats. Paricalcitol and enalapril inhibited this. The increase in cardiac atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) seen in UC rats was significantly decreased by paricalcitol. Enalapril produced a more dramatic reduction in ANP. Renal oxidative stress plays a critical role in inflammation and progression of sclerosis. The marked increase in p22(phox), a subunit of NADPH oxidase, and decrease in endothelial nitric oxide synthase were inhibited in all treated groups. Cotreatment with both compounds inhibited the uremia-induced increase in proinflammatory inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and glutathione peroxidase activity better than either compound alone. Glutathione reductase was also increased in UE and UP rats vs. UC. Kidney 4-hydroxynonenal was significantly increased in the UC group compared with the normal group. Combined treatment with both compounds significantly blunted this increase, P < 0.05, while either compound alone had no effect. Additionally, the expression of Mn-SOD was increased and CuZn-SOD decreased by uremia. This was ameliorated in all treatment groups. Cotreatment with enalapril and paricalcitol had an additive effect in increasing CuZn-SOD expression. In conclusion, like enalapril, paricalcitol alone can improve proteinuria, glomerulosclerosis, and interstitial infiltration and reduce renal oxidative stress. The effects of paricalcitol may be amplified when an ACE inhibitor is added since cotreatment with both compounds seems to have an additive effect on ameliorating uremia-induced changes in iNOS and CuZn-SOD expression, peroxidase activity, and renal histomorphometry. Topics: Aldehydes; Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors; Animals; Atrial Natriuretic Factor; Enalapril; Ergocalciferols; Female; Glomerulonephritis; Kidney; NADPH Oxidases; Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II; Oxidative Stress; Proteinuria; Rats; Receptors, Calcitriol; Superoxide Dismutase; Uremia | 2012 |
Protective effects of L-type fatty acid-binding protein (L-FABP) in proximal tubular cells against glomerular injury in anti-GBM antibody-mediated glomerulonephritis.
In glomerulonephritis (GN), an overload of free fatty acids (FFA) bound to albumin in urinary protein may induce oxidative stress in the proximal tubules. Human liver-type fatty acid-binding protein (hL-FABP) expressed in human proximal tubules, but not rodents, participates in intracellular FFA metabolism and exerts anti-oxidative effects on the progression of tubulointerstitial damage. We examined whether tubular enhancement of this anti-oxidative action modulates the progression of glomerular damage in immune-mediated GN in hL-FABP chromosomal gene transgenic (Tg) mice.. Anti-glomerular basement membrane antibody-induced glomerulonephritis (anti-GBM GN) was induced in Tg and wild-type mice (WT). Proteinuria, histopathology, polymorphonuclear (PMN) influx, expression of tubulointerstitial markers for oxidative stress 4-hydroxy-2-Nonenal (HNE) and fibrosis (α-smooth muscle actin), proximal tubular damage (Kim-1), Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor γ (PPAR γ) and inflammatory cytokines [Monocyte Chemotactic Protein-1, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) and Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β)] were analyzed. The mice were also treated with an angiotensin type II receptor blocker (ARB).. The urinary protein level in Tg mice decreased significantly during the acute phase (~Day 5). Tg mice survived for a significantly longer time than WT mice, with an attenuation of tubulointerstitial damage score and expression of each tubulointerstitial damage marker observed at Day 7. Expression of inflammatory cytokines on Day 7 was higher in WT mice than Tg mice and correlated strongly with PPARγ expression in WT mice, but not in Tg mice. Interestingly, Tg mice showed insufficient PMN influx at 3 and 6 h, with simultaneous elevation of urinary L-FABP and reduction in HNE expression. The two strains of mice showed different types of glomerular damage, with mild mesangial proliferation in Tg mice and severe endothelial swelling with vascular thrombosis in WT mice. The glomerular damage in Tg mice was improved by administration of an ARB.. The present experimental model suggests that tubular enhancement of L-FABP may protect mice with anti-GBM GN from progression of both tubulointerstitial and glomerular injury. Topics: Aldehydes; Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists; Animals; Autoantibodies; Blotting, Western; Chemokine CCL2; Cysteine Proteinase Inhibitors; Cytokines; Fatty Acid-Binding Proteins; Fatty Acids, Nonesterified; Female; Glomerulonephritis; Humans; Inflammation; Kidney Tubules, Proximal; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Inbred CBA; Mice, Transgenic; Nephritis, Interstitial; Oxidative Stress; PPAR gamma; Proteinuria; Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction; RNA, Messenger; Survival Rate; Transforming Growth Factor beta; Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha | 2011 |
Treatment with pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate improves proteinuria, oxidative stress, and glomerular hypertension in overload proteinuria.
We evaluated whether the blockade of the proinflammatory transcription factor NF-kappaB would modify the oxidative stress, inflammation, and structural and hemodynamic alterations found in the kidney as a result of massive proteinuria. Twenty male Sprague-Dawley rats were injected with 2 g of BSA intraperitoneally daily for 2 wk. Ten of them received in addition the inhibitor of NF-kappaB activation pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC; 200 mg.kg(-1).day(-1) sc) and the rest received vehicle. Seven rats that received intraperitoneal saline were used as controls. Glomerular hemodynamics were studied after 14 days. Markers of oxidative stress (NF-kappaB subunit p65+ cells, 3-nitrotyrosine, and 4-hydroxynonenal), inflammation (cortical CD68+ cells and NOS-II), and afferent arteriole damage were assessed by immunohistochemistry and morphometry. Activity of antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase, and glutathione reductase was evaluated in renal cortex and medulla. Albumin overload induced massive proteinuria, oxidative stress with reduced activity of antioxidant enzymes, NF-kappaB activation, inflammatory cell infiltration, a significant presence of proteinaceous casts, systemic and glomerular hypertension, as well as arteriolar remodeling. Treatment with PDTC prevented or improved all of these findings. In this model of nephrotic syndrome, we demonstrate a key role for oxidative stress and inflammation in causing systemic and glomerular hypertension and proteinuria. Oxidative stress and inflammation may have a key role in accelerating renal injury associated with intense proteinuria. Topics: Aldehydes; Animals; Antigens, CD; Antigens, Differentiation, Myelomonocytic; Blood Pressure; Glomerular Filtration Rate; Glutathione Reductase; Hypertension, Renal; Kidney; Kidney Glomerulus; Male; Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II; Organ Size; Oxidative Stress; Peroxidases; Proteinuria; Pyrrolidines; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Renal Plasma Flow; Superoxide Dismutase; Thiocarbamates; Transcription Factor RelA; Tyrosine | 2008 |
Galectin-3/AGE-receptor 3 knockout mice show accelerated AGE-induced glomerular injury: evidence for a protective role of galectin-3 as an AGE receptor.
We previously showed that mice lacking galectin-3/AGE-receptor 3 develop accelerated diabetic glomerulopathy. To further investigate the role of galectin-3/AGE-receptor function in the pathogenesis of diabetic renal disease, galectin-3 knockout (KO) and coeval wild-type (WT) mice were injected for 3 months with 30 microg/day of N(epsilon)-carboxymethyllysine (CML)-modified or unmodified mouse serum albumin (MSA). Despite receiving equal doses of CML, KO had higher circulating and renal AGE levels and showed more marked renal functional and structural changes than WT mice, with significantly higher proteinuria, albuminuria, glomerular, and mesangial area and glomerular sclerosis index. Renal 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal content and NFkappaB activation were also more pronounced in KO-CML vs. WT-CML. Kidney mRNA levels of fibronectin, laminin, collagen IV, and TGF-beta were up-regulated, whereas those of matrix metalloproteinase-2 and -14 were down-regulated, again more markedly in KO-CML than WT-CML mice. Basal and CML-induced RAGE and 80K-H mRNA levels were higher in KO vs. WT mice. MSA injection did not produce any significant effect in both genotypes. The association of galectin-3 ablation with enhanced susceptibility to AGE-induced renal disease, increased AGE levels and signaling, and altered AGE-receptor pattern indicates that galectin-3 is operating in vivo as an AGE receptor to afford protection toward AGE-dependent tissue injury. Topics: Aldehydes; Animals; Cell Death; Cell Proliferation; Extracellular Matrix Proteins; Galectin 3; Glycation End Products, Advanced; Kidney; Kidney Cortex; Kidney Diseases; Kidney Glomerulus; Kinetics; Lysine; Matrix Metalloproteinases; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Knockout; NF-kappa B; Proteinuria; Receptor for Advanced Glycation End Products; Receptors, Immunologic; RNA, Messenger; Transforming Growth Factor beta | 2004 |
Interactions between mitochondrial proteins and lipid peroxidation products in the maintenance of the glomerular filtration barrier in the in vitro perfused kidney.
The fourth complex of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, cytochrome-c oxidase (CytC) consists of thirteen both mitochondrially and nuclearly encoded subunits, which are differently regulated in proteinuric kidneys. The effect of mitochondrial involvement on proteinuria is not known.. We set up an in vitro kidney perfusion model to study the direct effect of inhibitors of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, rotenone and antimycin A, on the glomerular filtration barrier by using immunohistochemistry and Northern blotting and quantitating the resulting proteinuria.. Rapid onset of proteinuria and characteristic changes in CytC subunits were seen in the perfused kidneys. Urinary protein excretion increased significantly in the rotenone- and antimycin-A-treated groups during perfusion. Downregulation of CytC subunits I and IV was similarly found in the groups treated with rotenone and antimycin A, while increases in the lipid peroxidation (LPO) products malondialdehyde and 4-hydroxynonenal which reflect mitochondrial damage, were observed.. These data show rapid changes in mitochondrial proteins and induction of proteinuria in response to exposure to mitochondrial inhibitors. Together with the concomitant increase in local LPO products, these results suggest that continuous maintenance of a proper energy balance is important to maintain the glomerular filtration barrier. Topics: Aldehydes; Animals; Antimycin A; Electron Transport Complex IV; In Vitro Techniques; Isoenzymes; Kidney Glomerulus; Lipid Peroxides; Male; Malondialdehyde; Mitochondria; Oxidative Phosphorylation; Perfusion; Proteinuria; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Reference Values; Rotenone | 2001 |
Lipid peroxidation in human proteinuric disease.
While metabolically generated oxidants are produced locally in experimental glomerular diseases, little is still known of their significance and the respective scavenger systems in human glomerular diseases.. Here we studied kidneys from patients with congenital nephrotic syndrome of the Finnish type (CNF), a human model disease of isolated proteinuria. Expression of specific mRNAs for a major antioxidant system against lipoperoxidation [phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPx)] and for mitochondrial proteins were studied in Northern blotting together with analysis of PHGPx in semiquantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). The respective proteins and lipoperoxide (LPO) adducts malonyldialdehyde (MDA) and 4-hydroxynonenal (4-HNE) were analyzed in immunohistochemistry.. PHGPx and the mitochondrially encoded subunits of cytochrome-c-oxidase were distinctly down-regulated within the glomeruli of CNF kidneys. These changes were confirmed in semiquantitative RT-PCR. Increases of lipoperoxidation products MDA and 4-HNE were constantly found in the glomeruli of CNF. In agreement with findings in CNF, similar results were obtained in biopsies from other human glomerular diseases.. These findings suggest that local mitochondrial damage initiates LPO, which then causes deposition of the cytotoxic LPO products in glomeruli, as seen especially in CNF kidneys. Together with down-regulation of the local antioxidant protection, these may be important pathophysiologic mechanisms in human glomerular disease. Topics: Adolescent; Aldehydes; Blotting, Northern; Child; Child, Preschool; Glutathione Peroxidase; Humans; Immunohistochemistry; Isoenzymes; Kidney; Lipid Peroxides; Malondialdehyde; Nephrotic Syndrome; Phospholipid Hydroperoxide Glutathione Peroxidase; Prostaglandin-Endoperoxide Synthases; Proteinuria; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction; RNA, Messenger | 2001 |
Tissue distribution of alpha-tocopherol in nephrotic rats.
1. Reactive oxygen species are involved in the pathogenesis of puromycin aminonucleoside (PAN) nephrosis and alpha-tocopherol is one of the major anti-oxidants in the body. 2. In the present study, we measured the levels of alpha-tocopherol by high-performance liquid chromatography in the plasma and in nine tissues of control and nephrotic rats obtained 10 days after either 0.9% saline solution or PAN injection, respectively. 3. In nephrotic rats, alpha-tocopherol levels increased four-fold in plasma; however, the molar ratio of alpha-tocopherol/ cholesterol remained unchanged, suggesting that the increase in alpha-tocopherol content was attributable to an increase in plasma lipid concentration. 4. In nephrotic rats, the alpha-tocopherol/cholesterol ratio increased 1.33-fold in adrenal glands and 1.34-fold in the testis, but remained unchanged in heart, spleen, liver, kidney lung, brain and muscle. 5. These data suggest that, in PAN nephrotic rats, there are alterations in the distribution of alpha-tocopherol and there is no deficiency of alpha-tocopherol in plasma or tissues. Topics: Aldehydes; Animals; Lipid Peroxidation; Male; Malondialdehyde; Nephrosis; Nephrotic Syndrome; Proteinuria; Puromycin Aminonucleoside; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Time Factors; Tissue Distribution; Vitamin E | 2000 |
Proteinuria in passive Heymann nephritis is associated with lipid peroxidation and formation of adducts on type IV collagen.
Passive Heymann nephritis (PHN) is a model of human membranous nephropathy that is characterized by formation of granular subepithelial immune deposits in the glomerular capillary wall which results in complement activation. This is causally related to damage of the filtration barrier and subsequent proteinuria. The local accumulation of injurious reactive oxygen species (ROS) is a major effector mechanism in PHN. ROS may induce tissue damage by initiating lipid peroxidation (LPO). In turn, this leads to adduct formation between breakdown products of LPO with structural proteins, such as formation of malondialdehyde (MDA) or 4-hydroxynonenal-lysine adducts. To examine the role of LPO in the development of proteinuria we have localized MDA and 4-hydroxynonenal-lysine adducts in glomeruli of PHN rats by immunofluorescence microscopy, using specific monoclonal antibodies. By immunogold electron microscopy, MDA adducts were localized to cytoplasmic vesicles and cell membranes of glomerular epithelial cells, to the glomerular basement membrane (GBM), and also to immune deposits. Type IV collagen was specifically identified as being modified by MDA adducts, using a variety of techniques. Collagenase pretreatment of GBM extracts indicated that the NC-1 domain of type IV collagen was a site of adduct formation. When LPO was inhibited by pretreatment of PHN rats with the antioxidant probucol, proteinuria was reduced by approximately 85%, and glomerular immunostaining for dialdehyde adducts was markedly reduced, even though the formation of immune deposits was not affected. By contrast, lowering of the serum cholesterol levels had no influence on the development of proteinuria. These findings are consistent with the premise that ROS-induced glomerular injury in PHN involves LPO and that this results not only in damage of cell membranes but in modification of type IV collagen in the GBM as well. The close temporal correlation of the occurrence of LPO with proteinuria and the ability of probucol to inhibit proteinuria support a causal role for LPO in the the alteration of the glomerular permselectivity which results in proteinuria. Topics: Aldehydes; Animals; Anticholesteremic Agents; Antigen-Antibody Complex; Basement Membrane; Cholesterol; Collagen; Disease Models, Animal; Epithelial Cells; Glomerulonephritis; Kidney Glomerulus; Lipid Peroxidation; Lovastatin; Lysine; Male; Malondialdehyde; Probucol; Proteinuria; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Reactive Oxygen Species; Simvastatin | 1994 |