Diabetes and hypertension are the leading causes of end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Despite effective medications, compliance and drug costs are serious problems and only a small percentage of patients achieve adequate life-long control of blood pressure or their diabetes. As a result, the incidence of ESRD is increasing as the population ages and becomes more obese. The cost to the U.S. federal government for the treatment of ESRD exceeds 15 billion dollars a year.
Current treatment options for ESRD include kidney dialysis and transplant. In addition to the high cost associated with these two treatments, dialysis only provides filtration but not other functions of the kidney and kidney transplant has the problems of organ shortage and rejection.
Recently, TGF-β has been identified as a target for treating diabetes- and hypertension-induced nephropathies since TGF-β expression has been found to be upregulated in kidney in patients and animal models of these diseases (Noble N A and Border W A, Sem Nephrol 17:455-466, 1997; Reeves W B and Anderoli T E, Proc Natl Acad Sci 97:7667-7669, 2000; Sharma K and McGowan T. Cytokine Growth Factor Rev 11:115-123, 2000; Sharma K et al., Diabetes 46:854-859, 1997; Yamamoto T et al., Proc Nat'l Acad Sci 90:1814-1818, 1993; Yamamoto T et al., Kidney Int 49:461-469, 1996). Diabetes- and hypertension-induced nephropathies are characterized by the early development of proteinuria which accelerates the progression of renal disease by, for example, promoting the development of glomerular lesions (e.g., glomerulosclerosis), and TGF-β overexpression is believed to be a critical factor in this process (Dahly A J et al., Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 283:R757-767, 2002; Border W A et al. N Engl J Med 331:1286-1292, 1994; Sanders P W Hypertension 43:142-146, 2004; McCarthy E T et al., J Am Soc Nephrol 14:84A, 2003; Bottinger E P et al., J Am Soc Nephrol 10:2600-2610, 2002; August P et al., Kidney Int Suppl 87:S99-104, 2003; Ziyadeh F N et al., Proc Nat'l Acad Sci USA 97:8015-8020, 2000; 175, 202, 218, 265, 266). For example, TGF-β has been found to directly increase the permeability of isolated glomeruli to albumin (Sharma R et al., Kidney Int 58:131-136, 2000), indicating a direct role of TGF-β in the induction of proteinuria. TGF-β has also been found to increase the production of extracellular matrix and promotes the development of glomerulosclerosis and renal interstitial fibrosis (Pavenstadt H et al., Physiol Rev 83:253-307, 2003; Border W A et al. N Engl J Med 331:1286-1292, 1994; and Sanders P W Hypertension 43:142-146, 2004). Importantly, blocking the activity of TGF-β by either TGF-β antibodies or antisense oligonucleotides has been shown to reduce the degree of proteinuria and glomerular damage (Dahly A J et al., Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 283:R757-767, 2002; Ziyadeh F N et al., Proc Nat'l Acad Sci USA 97:8015-8020, 2000; Chen s et al., Biochem Biophys Res Commun 300:16-22, 2003; and Han D C et al., Am J Physiol 278F628-F634, 2000).
Increased TGF-β expression in kidney is also associated with kidney transplantation rejection (Shihab F S et al. Kidney Int 50:1904-1913, 1996; Shihab F S et al., J Am Soc Nephrol 6:286-294, 1995), various forms of glomerulosclerosis (Yamamoto T et al., Kidney Int 49:461-469, 1996; Yoshioka K et al., Lab Invest 68:154-163, 1993), Heyman nephritis (Shankland S J et al., Kidney Int 50:116-124, 1996), remnant kidney (Lee L et al., J Clin Invest 96:953-964, 1995; Wu L L et al., Kidney Int 51:1553-1567, 1997), ureteral obstruction (Kaneto H et al., Kidney Int 44:313-321, 1993), kidney diseases caused by radiation and immunosuppressive and nephrotoxic drugs such as cyclosporine, puromycin, cisplatin, and heavy metals (Oikawa T et al., Kidney Int 51:164-172, 1997; Sharma V K et al., Kidney Int 49:1297-1303, 1996; Shihab F S et al. Kidney Int 49:1141-1151, 1996; Jones C L et al., Am J Path 141:1381-1396, 1992; Ma L J et al. Kidney Int 65:106-115, 2004), and every animal model of renal injury that has been examined (Noble N A and Border W A, Sem Nephrol 17:455-466, 1997). Blocking TGF-β activity by its antibodies provided beneficial effects in cyclosporine- and puromycin-induced nephropathies (Ling H et al., J Am Soc Nephrol 14:377-388, 2003; Ma L J et al. Kidney Int 65:106-115, 2004).
The mechanism by which TGF-β initiates the development of proteinuria and renal injury is not clear. Identifying downstream respondents of TGF-β in this regard will provide additional and novel targets for the treatment of renal diseases associated with elevations in the expression of TGF-β in the kidney.
The present invention provides a method for preventing or treating a renal disorder in a human or non-human animal by administering 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE) or an agonist thereof to the human or non-human animal in an amount sufficient to prevent or treat the renal disorder.
The present invention further provides a method for preventing or treating ischemic acute renal failure in a human or non-human animal by administering 20-HETE or an agonist thereof to the human or non-human animal in an amount sufficient to prevent or treat ischemic acute renal failure.
The present invention further provides a method for preventing or reducing the severity of damage to an ex vivo preserved kidney upon reperfusion by preserving the kidney ex vivo in a storage solution that contains 20-HETE or an agonist thereof in an amount sufficient to prevent or reduce the severity of damage to the kidney upon reperfusion.
It is disclosed here that upregulation in renal TGF-β increases permeability of the glomerular filtration barrier to albumin and other macromolecules through inhibiting the glomerular production of 20-HETE. As such increase in glomerular permeability to albumin leads to proteinuria and further to other glomerular injuries (e.g., glomerulosclerosis and renal interstitial fibrosis), the present invention provides new tools for preventing and treating TGF β-related renal disorders as well as physical and pathological manifestations thereof.
In one aspect, the present invention relates to a method for preventing or treating a TGF β-related renal disorder in a human or non-human animal. The method involves administering 20-HETE or a 20-HETE agonist to the human or non-human animal in an amount sufficient to prevent or treat the renal disorder. By TGF β-related renal disorder, we mean a renal disease and physical and pathological manifestations thereof in which TGF-β expression is upregulated. Examples of such disorders include but are not limited to proteinuria, nephropathies induced by diabetes and hypertension (e.g., salt sensitive hypertension), kidney transplantation rejection, Heyman nephritis, remnant kidney nephropathy, ureteral obstruction nephropathy, and kidney diseases caused by radiation and immunosuppressive and nephrotoxic drugs such as cyclosporine, puromycin, cisplatin, and heavy metals. In one embodiment, the method of the present invention is employed to prevent or treat proteinuria or a proteinuria-related renal disorder. By proteinuria-related renal disorder, we mean a renal disease in which proteinuria is detected. In another embodiment, the method of the present invention is employed to prevent or treat diabetes- or hypertension-induced nephropathy.
Examples of 20-HETE agonists that can be used in the present invention include but are not limited to those disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,395,781; Yu M et al., Eur J Pharmacol. 486:297-306, 2004; Yu M et al., Bioorg Med Chem. 11:2803-2821, 2003; and Alonso-Galicia M et al., Am J Physiol. 277:F790-796, 1999, all of which are herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. For example, 20-HETE agonists defined by the following formula as provided in U.S. Pat. No. 6,395,781 can be used in the present invention:
wherein R1 is selected from the group consisting of carboxylic acid, phenol, amide, imide, sulfonamide, sulfonamide, active methylene, 1,3-dicarbonyl, alcohol, thiol; amine, tetrazole and other heteroaryl groups;
R2 is selected from the group consisting of carboxylic acid, phenol, amide, imide, sulfonamide, sulfonamide, active methylene, 1,3-dicarbonyl, alcohol, thiol, amine, tetrazole and other heteroaryl; W is a carbon chain (C1 through C25) and may be linear, cyclic, or branched and may comprise heteroatoms;
Y is a carbon chain (C1 through C25) and may be linear, cyclic, or branched and may comprise heteroatoms;
Sp<3 Center is selected from the group consisting of vinyl, aryl, heteroaryl, cyclopropyl, and acetylenic moieties;
X is an alkyl chain that may be linear, branched, cyclic or polycyclic and may comprise heteroatoms;
m is 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5; and
n is 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5.
Preferably, a 20-HETE agonist defined by the above formula has a carboxyl or other ionizable group at either R1 or R2 and contains a double bond or other functional group at a distance equal to 14-15 carbons from the ionizable group (U.S. Pat. No. 6,395,781). More preferably, the 20-HETE agonist contains a length of 20-21 carbons, has a carboxyl or other ionizable group at either R1 or R2, contains a double bond or other functional group at a distance equal to 14-15 carbons from the ionizable group, and contains a hydroxyl group on the 20 or 21 carbon at either R1 or R2 (U.S. Pat. No. 6,395,781).
In one form, the present invention contemplates the use of one or more of the following 20-HETE agonists: 20-hydroxyeicosanoic acid, 20-hydroxyeicosa-5(Z),14(Z)-dienoic acid (WIT003), and N-methylsulfonyl-20-hydroxyeicosa-5(Z),14(Z)-dienamide.
In addition to the beneficial effect on chronic renal diseases associated with elevations in renal TGF-β expression such as proteinuria, diabetes-induced nephropathy, and hypertension-induced nephropathy, the inventors also found that treating animals with 20-HETE or a 20-HETE agonist was able to reduce acute renal injury caused by ischemia (see example 2 below).
Ischemia is defined as a poor supply of blood and oxygen to an organ. When the blood supply to the kidney is cut off or reduced, the tubular cells undergo necrosis and apoptosis and acute renal failure can develop. Ischemia has many causes such as cardiac surgery, loss of blood, loss of fluid from the body as a result of severe diarrhea or burns, shock, and ischemia associated with storage of the donor kidney prior to transplantation. In these situations, the blood flow to the kidney may be reduced to a dangerously low level for a time period great enough to cause ischemic injury to the tubular epithelial cells, sloughing off of the epithelial cells into the tubular lumen, obstruction of tubular flow that leads to loss of glomerular filtration and acute renal failure.
Acute renal failure refers to a sudden decline of glomerular filtration rate to a level so low that little or no urine is formed, and substances that the kidney usually eliminates remain in the body. Ischemia causes acute renal failure by reducing the blood flow to the kidney, which leads to inefficient excretion. The reduced blood flow also results insufficient oxygen supply to the highly metabolically active renal tubular cells that become depleted of high energy phosphates and undergo irreversible ischemic injury leading to necrosis and/or apoptosis. The cells then rupture or slough off the basement membrane and obstruct the tubular lumen that then backs up pressure in the obstructed tubules and prevents filtration even when and if renal perfusion is restored.
As 20-HETE is a potent renal vasoconstrictor, it is surprising that 20-HETE or an agonist thereof would have beneficial effects on kidneys damaged by ischemia. Without intending to be limited by theory, the inventors believe that the beneficial effects of 20-HETE in preventing renal ischemic injury is likely due to its effects on the survival of tubular epithelial cells subjected to an ischemic insult as 20-HETE has direct effects to inhibit sodium transport in tubular epithelial cells and activates many intracellular pathways implicated in cell growth and survival. In this regard, the present invention provides a method for preventing or treating ischemic acute renal failure in a human or non-human animal by administering 20-HETE and/or a 20-HETE agonist to the human or non-human animal in an amount sufficient to prevent or treat ischemic acute renal failure. Optionally, the method also involves the step of monitoring kidney function such as the urine-forming function wherein treatment with 20-HETE and/or an agonist thereof is expected to improve such function. For example, 20-HETE or an agonist thereof can be given to a patient before, during, and/or immediately after cardiac surgery or kidney transplantation operation to prevent or treat acute renal failure. Examples of 20-HETE agonists, including the preferred ones, are as described above.
The present invention is not limited by a specific route of administration. Suitable routes of administration for 20-HETE or a 20-HETE agonist include but are not limited to oral administration, intravenous administration, subcutaneous administration, intramuscular administration, and direct delivery into the kidney. Optimal dosages of 20-HETE or a particular 20-HETE agonist for preventing or treating a particular renal disorder via a particular route of administration can be readily determined by a skilled artisan.
20-HETE and/or an agonist thereof may also be used to preserve a kidney ex vivo. Organs that are used for transplantation require effective ex vivo preservation from the moment the organ is retrieved to the time of transplantation. Hypothermic preservation solutions have been developed to maintain tissue viability by reducing metabolic activity and the accumulation of toxic substances during the cold ischemic period. Organs -used for transplantation can undergo lengthy periods of cold ischemic storage after removal from the blood supply, resulting in an increased susceptibility to damage upon reperfusion. In clinical renal transplantation, prolonged cold storage has been demonstrated in many studies to be strongly associated with delayed graft function, which may affect subsequent short- and long-term graft survival. The present invention provides a method for preventing or reducing the severity of damage to an ex vivo preserved kidney upon reperfusion by preserving the kidney ex vivo in a storage solution that contains 20-HETE and/or a 20-HETE agonist in an amount sufficient to prevent or reduce the severity of damage to the kidney upon reperfusion. In one embodiment, such amount is from about 0.1 μM to about 10 μM. Optionally, 20-HETE and/or an agonist thereof is also included in one or more of the other solutions that a kidney will come in contact with from the time of retrieval to the time of transplantation. A doctor who will perform the transplantation operation and/or a patient who will receive the kidney may be informed that the kidney has been preserved under the conditions for preventing or reducing the severity of kidney damage upon reperfusion.
The invention will be more fully understood upon consideration of the following non-limiting example.
This example shows that transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-β) alters the glomerular permeability by inhibiting the glomerular production of 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE). Renal expression of TGF-β doubled in Dahl salt-sensitive (Dahl S) rats fed a high salt diet for 7 days and this was associated with a marked rise in permeability to albumin (Palb) from 0.19±0.04 to 0.75±0.01 along with changes in the ultrastructure of the glomerular filtration barrier. Chronic treatment of Dahl S rats with a TGF-β neutralizing antibody prevented the increase in Palband preserved the structure of glomerular capillaries proving that hypertension-induced renal disease is dependent on increased formation and action of TGF-β. It had no effect on the rise in blood pressure produced by the high-salt diet. Preincubation of glomeruli isolated from Sprague Dawley (SD) rats with TGF-β1 (10 ng/ml) for 15 minutes increased Palbfrom 0.01±0.01 to 0.60±0.02. This was associated with inhibition of the glomerular production of 20-HETE from 221±11 to 3.4±0.5 μg/30 min/mg protein. Pretreatment of SD glomeruli with a stable analog of 20-HETE, 20-hydroxyeicosa-5(Z), 14(Z)-dienoic acid, reduced baseline Palb and opposed the effects of TGF-β to increase Palb.
Materials and Methods
Dahl salt-sensitive rat model: Dahl salt-sensitive (S) rats exhibit many traits associated with salt-sensitive hypertension in humans (Campese V M. Hypertension 78:531-550, 1994; and Grimm C E et al., Hypertension 15:803-809, 1990). They are salt-sensitive (Iwai, J. Hypertension 9:118-120, 1987; and Rapp J. P. Hypertension 4:753-763, 1982), insulin-resistant (Reft, G M et al., Hypertension 18:630-635, 1991)and hyperlipidemic (Raji, L et al., Kidney Int. 41:801-806, 1984; and O'Donnell, M P et al., Hypertension 20:651-658, 1992), and they rapidly develop proteinuria and glomerulosclerosis when challenged with a high salt (HS) diet (O'Donnell, M P et al., Hypertension 20:651-658, 1992; Roman R J et al., Hypertension 12:177-183, 1988; Roman R J et al., Hypertension 21:985-988, 1988; Roman R J et al., Am J Hypertens 10:63S-67S, 1997; and Tolins J P et al., Hypertension 16:452-461, 1990). The glomerular lesions that develop resemble those seen in patients with hypertension- and diabetes-induced nephropathy (McClellan W et al., Am J Kidney Dis 12:285-290, 1987; Ronstand G S et al., N Engl J Med 306:1276-1279, 1982; and Tierney W M et al., Am J Kidney Dis 13:485-493, 1989). The renal expression of transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) is elevated in Dahl S rats fed a high salt (HS) diet and that chronic treatment of Dahl S rats with a TGF-β neutralizing antibody (Ab) for three weeks reduces proteinuria and the degree of glomerulosclerosis and fibrosis (Dahly A J et al., Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 283:R757-767, 2002).
General: Experiments were performed on 7-week-old Sprague Dawley (Taconic Labs) rats fed a normal-salt diet containing 1% NaCl (#5010, Purina) and Dahl salt-sensitive/John Rapp rats obtained from our colony maintained at the Medical College of Wisconsin. Rats were fed a purified diet (AIN76) purchased from Dytes, Inc. that contained either 0.4% (low salt, LS) or 8.0% NaCI (high salt, HS). To assess the role of TGF-β in altering proteinuria and Paib during hypertension development, a group of the Dahl S rats fed a HS diet were treated with an intraperitoneal injection of a murine anti-TGF-β monoclonal Ab (0.5 mg/kg; 1D11; Genzyme Corp) or a control murine monoclonal Ab (13C4; antiverotoxin) every other day (Dasch J R et al., J Immunol 10:2109-2119, 1989). At the end of the treatment period, rats were placed overnight in metabolic cages for measurement of protein and albumin excretion (Dahly A J et al., Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 283:R757-767, 2002). They were then anesthetized with halothane, and the kidneys were collected for measurement of the expression of TGF-β protein levels by Western blot (Hoagland K M et al., Hypertension 43:860-865, 2004) and for glomerular isolation for the measurement of Palb and the production of 20-HETE. Catheters connected to radiotelemetry transmitters Data Science Inc.) were implanted into the femoral artery of 10 additional control and 10 1D11-treated Dahl S rats to determine the effects of anti-TGF-β therapy on the development of hypertension. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) was measured for 3 hours per day, between 9 AM and 12 PM, during a control period when rats were fed an LS diet and after they were fed an HS diet for 7 days.
Measurement of Albumin Permeability (Palb): Glomeruli were isolated using the sieving method described in Sharma R et al. (Kidney Int 58:131-136, 2000) and Savin V J et al. (J Am Soc Nephrol 3:1260-1269, 1992) in a media containing 5 g/dl of bovine serum albumin (BSA). In each experimental condition, Palb was determined from the change in glomerular volume (ΔV) after exchange of the bath with medium containing 1 g/dL albumin. Palb was calculated as 1-(ΔVexperimental/ΔVcontrol), where glomeruli from Sprague Dawley rats fed a normal-salt diet were used to provide the control value for each experiment. To verify that lack of ΔVs in Dahl S rats were related to changes in Palb rather than to changes in mechanical properties of glomeruli, additional studies were performed in which the glomeruli were exposed to a 5% solution of high molecular weight dextran. A change in the size of Dahl S glomeruli under these conditions indicates that the lack of response to 1% albumin was attributable to an increase in Paib (Savin V J et al., J Am Soc Nephrol 3:1260-1269, 1992).
In other experiments, we examined the interaction of TGF-β and 20-HETE on Palb in glomeruli isolated from Sprague Dawley rats and Dahl S rats fed either an LS diet or an HS diet for 4 days. Glomeruli were preincubated with vehicle or TGF-β1 (10 ng/ml) for 15 minutes at 37° C. and changes in Palb were determined. Glomeruli were also pretreated with a stable 20-HETE agonist, 20-hydroxyeicosa-5(Z), 14(Z)-dienoic acid (WIT003; 1 μmol/L; Taisho Pharmaceutical) (Alonso-Galicia, M et al., Am. J. Physiol. 277:F790-F796, 1999; and Yu, M et al., Bioorg. Med. Chem. 11:2803-2821, 2003), for 15 minutes at 37° C. and the Palb response to TGF-β1 (10 ng/ml) was redetermined. A minimum of 5 glomeruli from each rat was studied, and these experiments were performed using ≧5 rats per treatment group.
Electron microscopy: Kidneys from Dahl S rats fed an LS diet and Dahl S rats fed an HS diet for 1 week and treated with 1D11 or vehicle were collected and fixed in a 4% glutaldehyde solution. Thin epon sections were prepared, stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate, and examined at 16,000× using a transmission electron microscope (Hitachi H600).
Western blots. Homogenates were prepared from the kidneys of control Sprague Dawley rats and Dahl S rats fed an LS or HS diet for 7 days. Aliquots of the homogenates (30 μg protein) were separated on a 12.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate gel, transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane incubated with a primary TGF-β1 Ab (SC:146; Santa Cruz Biotechnology), followed by a secondary Ab (SC:2004; Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and developed using enhanced chemiluminescence as described in Hoagland K M et al., Hypertension 43:860-865, 2004. Membranes were poststained with Commassie blue to normalize results for potential differences in sample loading.
Liquid Chromatography/Mass Spectroscopy measurement of glomerular 20-HETE production: Glomeruli (approximately 20 μg protein) were incubated in a 0.1 mol/L KPO4 buffer containing 1 mmol/L NADPH for 30 min at 37° C. in the presence and absence of TGF-β1 (10 ng/ml). Incubations were stopped by acidification with formic acid, homogenized, and the homogenate extracted with chloroform:methanol (2:1) after addition of 10 ng of internal standard, 14,15-epoxyeicosa-5(Z)-enoic-methyl sulfonylimide (EEZE). Samples were reconstituted in 50% acetonitrile, cleaned up using on online reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) trapping column, and then the HETEs and epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (EETs) in the samples were separated using an isocratic step gradient on an 18C-RP 2×250 mm microbore HPLC (BetaBasic18 150×21 3 μm, Thermo.Hypersil-Keystone) using a mobile phase consisting of acetonitrile:water:acetic acid (57:43:0.1) for 20 minutes to resolve the HETEs followed by acetonitrile:water:acetic acid (63:37:0.1) for 15 minutes to resolve the EETs. Samples were ionized using negative ion electrospray and the peaks eluting with a mass/charge ratio (m/z) of 319 (HETEs and EETs) or 323 (internal standard) were isolated and monitored in the selective ion mass spectroscopy (MS) mode using an Agilent LSD ion trap mass spectrometer (Agilent Technologies 1100). The ratio of ion abundances in the peaks of interest (HETEs and EETs, m/z 319) versus that corresponding to the closely eluting internal standard (EEZE, m/z 323) were determined and compared with a standard curve generated over a range from 0.1 to 2 ng of 20-HETE and EETs with each batch of samples.
Statistics. Mean values±1 SE are presented. Significance of differences between mean values was determined using an ANOVA followed by the Student-Newman-Keuls post hoc test. A P<0.05 was considered significant.
Results
Effects of high salt diet on the renal expression of TGF-β1: The results of these experiments are presented in
Effects of high salt diet on Pa,b: A comparison of Palbin Sprague Dawley and Dahl S rats fed an LS and HS diet at various times for up to a week are presented in
Role of TGF-β in altering Palb in Dahl S rats: A comparison of the effects of exogenous administration of TGF-β1 (10 ng/mL) on Palb in glomeruli isolated from Sprague Dawley and Dahl S rats is also summarized in
Chronic treatment of Dahl S rats fed an HS diet with a TGF-β neutralizing Ab prevented the increase in baseline Palb. Administration of TGF-β1 to these glomeruli still increased Palb, similar to that seen in glomeruli isolated from control Sprague Dawley rats and Dahl S rats fed an LS diet. TGF-β1 Ab therapy had no effect on the rise in blood pressure. Blood pressure rose from 123±4 to 136±3 mm Hg (n=10) in Dahl S rats fed an HS diet that were treated with 1D11 for 7 days.
Electron microscopy: Electron micrographs of the ultrastructure of glomerular capillaries in Dahl S rats fed an LS or HS diet, and in those treated with the TGF-β Ab for 1 week, were obtained. The Dahl S rats fed an LS diet exhibited a normal appearance of the glomerular ultrafiltration barrier. In Dahl S rats fed an HS diet for 7 days, there was a retraction and fusion of the foot processes of podocytes and exposure of portions of the basement membrane. There was also swelling of the endothelial cells lining the glomerular capillaries, which changed their shape from a flattened to a more cubodial endothelium. These changes in the ultrastructure of glomerular filtration barrier in Dahl S rats fed an HS diet were prevented by administration of the TGF-β Ab.
Effect of TGF-β on the glomerular production of 20-HETE: The effects of TGF-β on the production and metabolism of arachidonic acid (AA) by isolated glomeruli are presented in
Effects of a 20-HETE agonist on Palb. The effect of addition of a 20-HETE agonist on the changes in Palb produced by TGF-β1 is summarized in
Materials and Methods
Experiments were performed in male Sprague Dawley rats anesthetized with pentobarbital (50 mg/Kg). The kidneys were exposed via a midline incision and the renal arteries isolated. Adjustable vascular occluders were placed on both the right and left renal arteries to completely occlude blood flow to the kidneys for 30 minutes. After the period of complete renal ischemia, the clamps were removed and the kidneys were reperfused. The surgical incisions were closed with 2-0 silk suture and the animals were allowed to fully recover from anesthesia. Twenty four hours later, the rats were reanesthetized with pentobarbital and a sample of blood collected from the aorta for measurement of plasma creatinine concentration using an autoanalyzer. The kidneys were collected, fixed in 10% formalin solution and paraffin sections prepared and stained with H and E to evaluate the degree of tubular necrosis and injury. Three groups of rats were studied. Group 1 rats were treated with vehicle and served as the control animals. Group 2 rats were treated with an inhibitor of the synthesis of 20-HETE, HET0016 (5 mg/Kg, sc) 30 minutes prior to renal ischemia. Group 3 rats were given a 20-HETE agonist, WIT 003 (10 mg/Kg, sc) by i.v. injection 30 minutes prior to renal ischemia.
Results
In other experiments, we compared the degree of renal injury seen in Dahl S rats (20-HETE deficient strain) subjected to 20 minutes of ischemia reperfusion with that seen in a congenic strain of Dahl S rat called 2×4 in which we introduced the CYP4A gene from Lewis rats that encodes for the enzyme that produces 20-HETE in the kidney. Transfer of this gene upregulates the expression of CYP4A protein in the kidney and the production of 20-HETE in the kidney. As can be seen in
The present invention is not intended to be limited to the foregoing example, but encompasses all such modifications and variations as come within the scope of the appended claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/229,241 filed on Sep. 16, 2005, which claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application 60/610,465, filed on Sep. 16, 2004. Both prior applications are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety.
This invention was made with United States government support awarded by the following agency: NIH HL-36279. The United States has certain rights in this invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60610465 | Sep 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11229241 | Sep 2005 | US |
Child | 11453132 | Jun 2006 | US |