RT-PCR-based evidence for the in vivo stimulation of renal tubular p-aminohippurate (PAH) transport by triiodothyronine (T3) or dexamethasone (DEXA) in kidney tissue of immature and adult rats

2003 ◽  
Vol 54 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 367-373 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Bahn ◽  
Achim Hauss ◽  
Dorothea Appenroth ◽  
Diana Ebbinghaus ◽  
Yohannes Hagos ◽  
...  
1976 ◽  
Vol 82 (3) ◽  
pp. 587-599 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Ramachandran ◽  
Y. C. Kong ◽  
Susanna Liles

ABSTRACT Both ACTH and NPS-ACTH in which the single tryptophan residue of the hormone is modified were able to stimulate adrenal corticosterone concentration to the same extent in hypophysectomized rats, although a higher dose of NPS-ACTH was required. ACTH stimulated adrenal cyclic AMP levels 120-fold in hypophysectomized rats whereas NPS-ACTH caused a marginal increase. In the case of ACTH, low doses of the hormone capable of producing maximal stimulation of corticosterone synthesis did not produce any detectable change in cyclic AMP concentration. The rates of secretion of corticosterone induced by ACTH and NPS-ACTH in vivo were the same. NPS-ACTH was found to be 1.2% as potent as ACTH. The role of cyclic AMP in adrenal repair was investigated by administering equipotent doses of ACTH or NPS-ACTH to hypophysectomized rats. In adult rats both failed to produce a significant increase in adrenal weight. Adrenal function (measured by responsiveness to exogenous ACTH in vitro) was restored by NPS-ACTH but not to the same degree as ACTH. In hypophysectomized weanling rats, ACTH produced a small but significant increase in adrenal weight but NPS-ACTH did not. These results suggest that an increase in adrenal cyclic AMP may not be obligatory for the stimulation of steroidogenesis by ACTH and that some of the trophic actions of the hormone may be mediated by cyclic AMP.


2002 ◽  
Vol 88 (3) ◽  
pp. 1288-1301 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter W. Hickmott ◽  
Michael M. Merzenich

Peripheral denervation has been shown to cause reorganization of the deafferented somatotopic region in primary somatosensory cortex (S1). However, the basic mechanisms that underlie reorganization are not well understood. In the experiments described in this paper, a novel in vivo/in vitro preparation of adult rat S1 was used to determine changes in local circuit properties associated with the denervation-induced plasticity of the cortical representation in rat S1. In the present studies, deafferentation of rat S1 was induced by cutting the radial and median nerves in the forelimb of adult rats, resulting in a rapid shift of the location of the forepaw/lower jaw border; the amount of the shift increased over the times assayed, through 28 days after denervation. The locations of both borders (i.e., original and reorganized) were marked with vital dyes, and slices from the marked region were used for whole-cell recording. Responses were evoked using electrical stimulation of supragranular S1 and recorded in supragranular neurons close to either the original or reorganized border. For each neuron, postsynaptic potentials (PSPs) were evoked by stimulation of fibers that crossed the border site (CB stim) and by equivalent stimulation that did not cross (NCB stim). Monosynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) were also examined after blocking excitatory transmission with 15 μM CNQX plus 100 μMdl-APV. The amplitudes of PSPs and IPSPs were compared between CB and NCB stimulation to quantify effects of the border sites on excitation and inhibition. Previous results using this preparation in the normal (i.e., without induced plasticity) rat S1 demonstrated that at a normal border both PSPs and IPSPs were smaller when evoked with CB stimulation than with NCB stimulation. For most durations of denervation, a similar bias (i.e., smaller responses with CB stimulation) for PSPs and IPSPs was observed at the site of the novel reorganized border, while no such bias was observed at the suppressed original border site. Thus changes in local circuit properties (excitation and inhibition) can reflect larger-scale changes in cortical organization. However, specific dissociations between these local circuit properties and the presence of the novel border at certain durations of denervation were also observed, suggesting that there are several intracortical processes contributing to cortical reorganization over time and that excitation and inhibition may contribute differentially to them.


2020 ◽  
Vol 35 (Supplement_3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dai Jie

Abstract Background and Aims Ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) may cause acute kidney injury(AKI) by mediating the oxidative stress and related inflammation then inducing apoptosis. The present study is to explore the preventive effect and mechanism of Scutellarin(Scu),on AKI induced by I/R. Method ①The renal ischemia-reperfusion model GSE98622 data set was selected from NCBI GEO DateSets, and the genes with significantly increased expression in acute kidney injury were selected. Further, dozens of hub-genes were identified as candidate proteins by protein-protein interaction network(PPI network). The molecular docking between the protein and the Scu was performed using the Autodock software. As the results of the molecular docking,the binding energy between the protein Nrf2 and Scu molecule is -9.84, suggesting that there is a high probability of interaction between the two molecules. ②Experiment in vivo. Wistar rats were randomly divided into 5 groups: normal group, sham group, AKI group (bilateral renal pedicle clip 45 min), Scu + AKI group (Intraperitoneal injection of 50 mg/kg.d Scu daily for 7 days before surgery,the same surgery with AKI group),Saline + AKI group (the same concentration of DMSO-normal saline solution daily for 7 days before surgery, the same surgery with AKI group), 6 rats in each group.The rats were sacrificed together 24h after surgery. ③Experiment in vitro.Human kidney tubular epithelial cells (HK-2) were firstly divided into 7 groups:hypoxia for 3 hours (h), 6h, 9h, 12h, 24h, 36h and 48h reoxygenation for 1h. RT-PCR detect Hihf1α, Nrf2, HO1,SOD-1,caspase3, Bcl2/BAX, NF-κB and TNFα levels to determine the best hypoxia time. To screen the safe concentration of the drug,after pretreatment with 200μmol/l, 150μmol/l,120μmol/l, 100μmol/l,80μmol/l,60μmol/l, 40μmol/l,20μmol/l, 10μmol/l,5μmol/l Scu for 12 h, use CCK8 to measure the absorbance. Then the optimal protective concentration in hypoxia was searched in maximum safe concentration to determine the final drug concentration.Finally,after the cells were randomly divided into normal group, hypoxia group, hypoxia + DMSO group, hypoxia + Scu group, RT-PCR ,Western Blot and ROS probe was used to detect related indicators. Results ①Bioinformatics analysis suggests that Nrf2 protein is one of the key factors in acute kidney injury induced by ischemia-reperfusion, which may be a target for the prevention and treatment of diseases. ②The results of experiments in vivo showed that compared with the normal group and the sham group, the serum creatinine level increased after AKI, and the HE staining showed that the renal tubular injury score increased . The creatinine and renal tubular injury score of Scu group were significantly relieved. Scu also reduces the level of MDA increased by AKI.KIM-1 increased, Nrf2 and HO-1 increased,SOD-1 decreased,Caspase3 increased, Bcl2/BAX decreased, NF-κB and TNFα increased after AKI, all P<0.05, suggesting obvious renal injury.However, the Scu+AKI group significantly up-regulated the Nrf2/HO-1 to combat oxidative stress damage.Moreover,Scu further down-regulated the inflammatory and apoptotic level. ③The pre-test choosed ischemia for 24h and re-oxygenation for 1 hour as the experiment time. And Compared with the normal group,the PCR results showed that in the hypoxia group and the hypoxia+DMSO group, the expression of hif1α increased, Nrf2 and HO-1 increased, caspase3 increased, Bcl2/BAX decreased, and NF-κB and TNFα increased, both P<0.05. The H+Scu group significantly reduced the oxidative stress through the results of ROS probe and increasing Nrf2/HO-1 and SOD-1 level.Scu also ameliorates the indicators of inflammation and apoptosis (P<0.05). The WB results are consistent with the PCR. Conclusion Scu has obvious protective effect on acute kidney injury induced by ischemia-reperfusion. The mechanism is probably alleviating oxidative stress by targeting Nrf2/HO-1 pathway.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zongying Li ◽  
Shuyi Cao

Abstract Background: Renal fibrosis is the pathological result of excessive deposition of extracellular matrix (ECM) in the process of chronic kidney disease, but its mechanism is not clear. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) exerts its therapeutic effect mainly through paracrine effects, such as exosome, to change the cellular microenvironment. Here, we explore the function of exosome derived MSCs in renal fibrosis.Methods: UUO model was constructed to simulate renal fibrosis in mice. Heat map and RT-PCR were used to explore the differential expression of miRNAs. RT-PCR and western blot were performed to detect the expression levels of fibrosis-associated genes and proteins in vivo and vitro. Transmission electron microscope and particle size detection were used to confirm the exosome construct. Then we forced expression of miR-21-3p in MSCs and isolated the exosomes. Then the fibrosis-associated genes and proteins were explored after exosomes injection.Results: In this study, we observed that exogenous miR-21-3p, interacted with smad2, the downstream target of miR-21-3p, which prevented renal fibrosis in UUO mice, and alleviate fibrosis in TGF-β1-induced renal tubular epithelium cells (HK-2). The extractive exosome-miR-21-3p treatment blocked renal fibrosis in UUO mice and alleviated fibrosis in TGF-β1-induced HK-2 cells and renal fibrosis mice. Conclusion: Taken together, Overexpression of miR-21-3p prevented CKD-induced renal fibrosis via exosome-mediated miR-21-3p transfer. These results suggest possible therapeutic strategies for using exosome delivery of miR-21-3p to treat complications of CKD.


Hypertension ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 66 (suppl_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda E Garza ◽  
Luminita Pojoga ◽  
Rene Baudrand ◽  
Burhanuddin Moize ◽  
Tham Yao ◽  
...  

Background: We recently demonstrated that mice lacking one copy of the striatin gene (Strn+/-) have salt sensitivity of blood pressure (BP) as compared with WT mice. To determine whether Strn+/- mice have increased sensitivity to aldosterone (ALDO), we assessed the effect on blood pressure of an ALDO infusion in WT and Strn+/- mice fed a liberal sodium diet. Methods: In this study we used 12 week old WT and Strn+/- littermate male mice. For each genotype, mice were placed on HS diet and randomized to either: 1) placebo 2) ALDO (200 μg/Kg/day) or 3) ALDO plus 100 mg/kg/day eplerenone. BP was measured by tail cuff plethysmography at baseline and after treatment. After 21 days of treatment, animals were placed in metabolic cages for 24 hours. Finally, animals were sacrificed and organs excised. Primary endpoints were BP, renal immunohistochemistry, protein analysis by western blot and mRNA expression by RT-PCR. Results: BP increased significantly in Strn+/- mice treated with ALDO (ΔBP: 12 ± 4 mmHg, p=0.03) but not placebo (ΔBP 6± 6 mmHg); the BP effect of ALDO was blunted by eplerenone (Δ 6 ± 3 mmHg). In contrast, none of the treatments had a significant effect on BP in WT mice. Kidney weight was significantly increased after 3 weeks of ALDO treatment in both WT and Strn+/- mice and this increase in kidney weight was prevented by treatment with eplerenone, with no difference between genotypes. WT mice had an increase in glomerular volume (GV) in HS/ALDO treated that was blunted by eplerenone. Interestingly, Strn+/- mice had increased GV across all 3 treatment groups compared with WT mice. pAkt/Akt ratios were reduced in Strn+/- mice versus WT mice across all treatments. Classic genomic MR targets (ENaC and SGK1) and non-genomic targets (pAkt/Akt) were significantly modulated in kidney tissue of Strn+/- mice compared to WT mice with chronic ALDO. Conclusion: Strn+/- mice have an increased sensitivity to infused ALDO (increased BP response and increased rise in renal ENaC and SGK1 protein) as compared to WT mice. Since loss of striatin directly reduces nongenomic not genomic action of ALDO, this study demonstrates for the first time that modifying the nongenomic pathway may under chronic, in vivo conditions led to increased sensitivity to the genomic actions of ALDO.


2001 ◽  
Vol 280 (2) ◽  
pp. H582-H590 ◽  
Author(s):  
Finn Gustafsson ◽  
Ditte Andreasen ◽  
Max Salomonsson ◽  
Boye L. Jensen ◽  
Niels-Henrik Holstein-Rathlou

The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of voltage-operated Ca2+ channels in the initiation and conduction of vasoconstrictor responses to local micropipette electrical stimulation of rat mesenteric arterioles (28 ± 1 μm, n = 79) in vivo. Local and conducted (600 μm upstream from the pipette) vasoconstriction was not blocked by TTX (1 μmol/l, n= 5), nifedipine, or nimodipine (10 μmol/l, n = 9). Increasing the K+ concentration of the superfusate to 75 mmol/l did not evoke vasoconstriction, but this depolarizing stimulus reversibly abolished vasoconstrictor responses to current stimulation ( n = 7). Addition of the T-type Ca2+antagonist mibefradil (10 μmol/l, n = 6) to the superfusate reversibly blocked local and conducted vasoconstriction to current stimulation. With the use of RT-PCR techniques, it was demonstrated that rat mesenteric arterioles <40 μm do not express mRNA for L-type Ca2+ channels (α1C-subunit), whereas mRNA coding for T-type subunits was found (α1G- and α1H-subunits). The data indicate that L-type Ca2+ channels are absent from rat mesenteric arterioles (<40 μm). Rather, the vasoconstrictor responses appear to rely on other types of voltage-gated, dihydropyridine-insensitive Ca2+ channels, possibly of the T-type.


1999 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 986-996
Author(s):  
SHIZUKA IIDA ◽  
AMMON B. PECK ◽  
JOANNE JOHNSON-TARDIEU ◽  
MANABU MORIYAMA ◽  
PATRICIA A. GLENTON ◽  
...  

Abstract. Inter-α-inhibitor and other bikunin-containing proteins are synthesized in relatively large quantities by the liver. These proteins function as Kunitz-type serine protease inhibitors and appear capable of inhibiting calcium oxalate (CaOx) crystallization in vitro. Preliminary studies have shown that renal tubular epithelial cells synthesize bikunin in response to CaOx challenge. To examine this response in vivo, a sensitive reverse transcription-quantitative competitive template-PCR was developed to detect and quantify poly(A)+ -tailed bikunin mRNA expression in kidney tissue from normal rats and rats developing CaOx nephrolithiasis after challenge with ethylene glycol. Bikunin mRNA expression in rat liver tissue was assessed as a positive control. The expression of bikunin mRNA in liver did not differ significantly between normal control rats and experimental rats with induced hyperoxaluria and renal CaOx crystallization. In contrast, there were significant temporal increases in the levels of bikunin mRNA expression in rat kidneys during CaOx nephrolithiasis after challenge with ethylene glycol. Urinary excretion of bikunin-containing proteins seemed to increase concomitantly. These findings indicate an association between the induction of hyperoxaluria/CaOx nephrolithiasis and the expression of the bikunin gene in rat kidneys.


2005 ◽  
Vol 184 (3) ◽  
pp. 567-576 ◽  
Author(s):  
X H Zhang ◽  
S Filippi ◽  
L Vignozzi ◽  
A Morelli ◽  
R Mancina ◽  
...  

We recently found that the oxytocin receptor (OTR) is expressed in the human and rabbit corpus cavernosum and mediates contractility in vitro. The present study extended our investigations to the rat, and explored whether OTR regulates penile detumescence in vivo. Real-time RT-PCR quantitatively characterized the distribution of OTR mRNA in the male genital tract. Specific transcripts for OTR were expressed in all the tissues investigated. Penile expression of OTR was comparable to that observed in testis and prostate. Western blot analysis detected a single band of the expected molecular mass for OTR in all tissues examined, including rat penis. Expression of OTR protein in rat penile extracts was further confirmed by binding studies, using the OTR selective radiolabeled ligand 125I-OTA (Kd=17 ± 6.5 pM, Bmax=15.7 ± 5 fmoles/mg protein). OTR was immunolocalized to the endothelial and smooth muscle compartments of cavernous spaces and blood vessels. In rat corpus cavernosum strips, oxytocin (OT) and an OTR selective agonist ([Thr4,Gly7]OT) induced identical increases in tension, while different vasopressin agonists were less active. In vivo, OT intra-cavernous injection (ICI) dose-dependently inhibited intracavernous pressure (ICP) increase elicited by either electrical stimulation of the cavernous nerve or ICI of papaverine with similar IC50s (117.7 ± 37 mU). The OTR antagonist, atosiban, counteracted the contractile effect of OT both in vitro and in vivo. Atosiban alone significantly increased ICP at lower stimulation frequencies (2 Hz=P<0.001 and 4 Hz=P<0.05 vs control), but not at the maximal frequency (16 Hz). Our data showed that OTR is present in the rat penis and mediates contractility both in vitro and in vivo, therefore suggesting a role for OT in maintaining penile detumescence.


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