scholarly journals Selenium Alleviated Oxidative Stress-Mediated Complex Poisoning Mechanism in Lead-Treated Chicken Kidneys: Inflammation, Heat Shock Response, and Autophagy

Author(s):  
Zhiying Miao ◽  
Weikang Yu ◽  
Yueyang Wang ◽  
You Tang ◽  
Xiaohua Teng

Abstract Lead (Pb) is a toxic environmental contaminant, and exerts renal toxicity. It is known that selenium (Se) performs antagonistic effect on Pb poisoning. However, biological events during the process were not well understood in chicken kidneys. The purpose of this research was to investigate mitigative mechanism of Se on Pb poisoning from point of view of oxidative stress, inflammation, heat shock response, and autophagy in chicken kidneys. One hundred and eighty male Hyline chickens (7-day-old) were randomly divided into the control group (offering standard diet and potable water), the Se group (offering Na2SeO3-added standard diet and potable water), the Pb group (offering standard diet and (CH3OO)2Pb-added potable water), and the Pb+Se group (offering Na2SeO3-added standard diet and (CH3OO)2Pb-added potable water). On 30th, 60th, and 90th days, kidneys were removed to perform the studies of histological structure, oxidative stress indicators, cytokines, heat shock proteins, and autophagy in the chicken kidneys. The experimental results indicated that Pb poisoning changed renal histological structure; decreased catalase, glutathione-s-transferase, and total antioxidative capacity activities; increased hydrogen peroxide content; induced mRNA and protein expression of heat shock proteins; inhibited interleukin (IL)-2 mRNA expression, and induced IL-4 and IL-12β mRNA expression; inhibited mammalian target of rapamycin mRNA and protein expression, and induced autophagy-related gene mRNA and protein expression in the chicken kidneys. Supplement of Se mitigated the above changes caused by Pb. In conclusion, Pb induced oxidative stress, inflammation, heat shock response, and autophagy and Se administration alleviated Pb poisoning through mitigating oxidative stress in the chicken kidneys.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiying Miao ◽  
Weikang Yu ◽  
Yueyang Wang ◽  
Xianhong Gu ◽  
Xiaohua Teng

Abstract Background: Lead (Pb) is a toxic environmental pollutant and can exerts toxicity in kidneys. It is known that selenium (Se) has an antagonistic effect on Pb poisoning. However, biological events during the process were not well understood in chicken kidneys.Methods: One hundred and eighty male Hyline chickens (7-day-old) were randomly divided into the control group (offering standard diet and potable water), the Se group (offering Na2SeO3-added standard diet and potable water), the Pb group (offering standard diet and (CH3OO)2Pb-added potable water), and the Pb+Se group (offering Na2SeO3-added standard diet and (CH3OO)2Pb-added potable water). On 30th, 60th, and 90th days, kidneys were removed to perform the studies of histological structure, oxidative stress indicators, cytokines, heat shock proteins, and autophagy in the chicken kidneys.Results: The experimental results indicated that Pb poisoning changed renal histological structure; decreased catalase, glutathione-s-transferase, and total antioxidative capacity activities; increased hydrogen peroxide content; induced mRNA and protein expression of heat shock proteins; inhibited interleukin (IL)-2 mRNA expression, and induced IL-4 and IL-12β mRNA expression; inhibited mammalian target of rapamycin mRNA and protein expression, and induced autophagy-related gene mRNA and protein expression in the chicken kidneys. Supplement of Se mitigated the above changes caused by Pb.Conclusion: Our research strengthens the evidence that Pb induced oxidative stress, inflammation, heat shock response, and autophagy and Se administration alleviated Pb poisoning through mitigating oxidative stress in the chicken kidneys.


2001 ◽  
Vol 280 (3) ◽  
pp. C614-C620 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chantal Colmont ◽  
Stéphanie Michelet ◽  
Dominique Guivarc'h ◽  
Germain Rousselet

Urea, with NaCl, constitutes the osmotic gradient that allows water reabsorption in mammalian kidneys. Because NaCl induces heat shock proteins, we tested the responses to heat shock of mIMCD3 cells adapted to permissive urea and/or NaCl concentrations. We found that heat-induced cell death was stronger after adaptation to 250 mM urea. This effect was reversible, dose dependent, and, interestingly, blunted by 125 mM NaCl. Moreover, we have shown that urea-adapted cells engaged in an apoptotic pathway upon heat shock, as shown by DNA laddering. This sensitization is not linked to a defect in the heat shock response, because the induction of HSP70 was similar in isotonic and urea-adapted cells. Moreover, it is not linked to the presence of urea inside cells, because washing urea away did not restore heat resistance and because applying urea and heat shock at the same time did not lead to heat sensitivity. Together, these results suggest that urea modifies the heat shock response, leading to facilitated apoptosis.


Author(s):  
Alice T. McDuffee ◽  
Guillermo Senisterra ◽  
Steven Huntley ◽  
James R. Lepock ◽  
Konjeti R. Sekhar ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Bernadett Kalmar ◽  
Linda Greensmith

AbstractPharmacological up-regulation of heat shock proteins (hsps) rescues motoneurons from cell death in a mouse model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. However, the relationship between increased hsp expression and neuronal survival is not straightforward. Here we examined the effects of two pharmacological agents that induce the heat shock response via activation of HSF-1, on stressed primary motoneurons in culture. Although both arimoclomol and celastrol induced the expression of Hsp70, their effects on primary motoneurons in culture were significantly different. Whereas arimoclomol had survival-promoting effects, rescuing motoneurons from staurosporin and H2O2 induced apoptosis, celastrol not only failed to protect stressed motoneurons from apoptosis under same experimental conditions, but was neurotoxic and induced neuronal death. Immunostaining of celastrol-treated cultures for hsp70 and activated caspase-3 revealed that celastrol treatment activates both the heat shock response and the apoptotic cell death cascade. These results indicate that not all agents that activate the heat shock response will necessarily be neuroprotective.


1985 ◽  
Vol 5 (7) ◽  
pp. 1571-1581 ◽  
Author(s):  
W J Welch ◽  
J R Feramisco

Mammalian cells show a complex series of transcriptional and translational switching events in response to heat shock treatment which ultimately lead to the production and accumulation of a small number of proteins, the so-called heat shock (or stress) proteins. We investigated the heat shock response in both qualitative and quantitative ways in cells that were pretreated with drugs that specifically disrupt one or more of the three major cytoskeletal networks. (These drugs alone, cytochalasin E and colcemid, do not result in induction of the heat shock response.) Our results indicated that disruption of the actin microfilaments, the vimentin-containing intermediate filaments, or the microtubules in living cells does not hinder the ability of the cell to undergo an apparently normal heat shock response. Even when all three networks were simultaneously disrupted (resulting in a loose, baglike appearance of the cells), the cells still underwent a complete heat shock response as assayed by the appearance of the heat shock proteins. In addition, the major induced 72-kilodalton heat shock protein was efficiently translocated from the cytoplasm into its proper location in the nucleus and nucleolus irrespective of the condition of the three cytoskeletal elements.


2003 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 229-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa A. Harju ◽  
Sunita deSouza ◽  
Mark R. Brodl

AbstractAleurone layers of mature germinating barley (Hordeum vulgare, cv. Himalaya) grains respond to heat shock by synthesizing heat-shock proteins (HSPs) and by selectively suppressing the synthesis of proteins normally translated by endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-bound ribosomes. To determine if this also was the case during seed development, we investigated the synthesis of proteins translated by ER-bound ribosomes in heat-shocked aleurone layers isolated from developing barley grains. The optimal induction temperature for the heat shock response in developing aleurone layers was 37.5°C, and temperatures above 42°C inhibited translation. HSPs with apparent molecular masses of 71.1, 66.2, 57.8, 19.1 and 18.8 kDa were induced. Other studies have shown that, in gibberellic acid (GA)-induced aleurone layers from mature barley grains, these temperatures were 40°C and 45°C, respectively. Furthermore, in developing aleurone layers, mRNAs encoding proteins translated by ER-bound ribosomes (mRNAs for a lipid transfer protein and a putative amylase/protease inhibitor) remained stable during heat shock. The ER membranes themselves remained in stacks, but the lumen became distended with electron-dense material. Heat shock prevented the movement of proteins from the ER into the rest of the endomembrane pathway. In contrast, other studies show that in mature, GA-induced aleurone layers, heat shock dissociates ER stacks and blocks translation, but the processing of secretory proteins in the endomembrane pathway is not inhibited. The observation that the same tissue at different developmental stages may respond differently to heat shock indicates that components of the heat-shock response are developmentally regulated. This system provides an opportunity to better understand the nuances of the heat-shock response, especially the post-transcriptional gene regulatory mechanisms that occur.


Genetics ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 124 (4) ◽  
pp. 949-955
Author(s):  
V K Mohl ◽  
G D Bennett ◽  
R H Finnell

Abstract Lymphocytes from adult mice bearing a known difference in genetic susceptibility to teratogen-induced exencephaly (SWV/SD, and DBA/2J) were evaluated for changes in protein synthesis following an in vivo heat treatment. Particular attention was paid to changes indicative of the heat shock response, a highly conserved response to environmental insult consisting of induction of a few, highly conserved proteins with simultaneous decreases in normal protein synthesis. The duration of heat shock protein induction in lymphocytes was found to be increased by 1 hr in the teratogen-sensitive SWV/SD strain as compared to the resistant DBA/2J strain. Densitometric analysis revealed a significant decrease in the relative synthesis of at least two non-heat shock proteins (36 kD and 45 kD) in the SWV/SD lymphocytes as compared to DBA/2J cells. The increased sensitivity of protein synthesis to hyperthermia in the SWV/SD lymphocytes were lost in the F1 progeny of reciprocal crosses between SWV/SD and DBA/2J mouse strains. Sensitivity to hyperthermia-induced exencephaly is recessive to resistance in these crosses. The relationship between altered protein synthesis and teratogen susceptibility is discussed.


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