AI Article Synopsis

  • Reactive oxygen species (ROS) play a crucial role in causing cell death (apoptosis) during renal ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury, but the specifics of how they do this remain unclear.
  • Researchers used lentiviral vectors to boost levels of superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) in kidney cells, discovering that SOD1 helped protect these cells from damage caused by loss and restoration of ATP, a key energy molecule.
  • While SOD1 over-expression reduced certain harmful effects, like cell death and activation of caspase-3 (an apoptosis marker), it wasn't enough to block all ROS-induced damage, suggesting that other types of ROS, like hydrogen peroxide and mitochondrial superoxide, also play roles

Article Abstract

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) contribute significantly to apoptosis in renal ischemia-reperfusion (IR) injury, however the exact mechanisms are not well understood. We used novel lentiviral vectors to over-express superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) in proximal tubular epithelial (LLC-PK(1)) cells and determined effects of SOD1 following ATP depletion-recovery, used as a model to simulate renal IR. SOD1 over-expression partially protected against cytotoxicity (P < 0.001) and decreased superoxide (O(2) (*-)) in ATP depleted cells. The ATP depletion-mediated increase in nuclear fragmentation, an index of apoptosis and activation of caspase-3 was also partially blocked by SOD1 (P < 0.05). However, SOD1 over-expression was insufficient to completely attenuate caspase-3, indicating that ROS other than cytoplasmic O(2) (*-) are involved in ATP depletion mediated injury. To test the contribution of hydrogen peroxide, a subset of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) and SOD1 (serum free and injured) cells were treated with polyethylene glycol-catalase (PEG-catalase). As expected there was 50% reduction in cytotoxicity and caspase-3 in SOD1 cells compared to EGFP cells; catalase treatment decreased both indices by an additional 28% following ATP depletion. To test the role of mitochondrial derived superoxide, we also treated a subset of LLC-PK(1) cells with the mitochondrial antioxidant, MitoTEMPO. Treatment with MitoTEMPO also decreased ATP depletion induced cytotoxicity in LLC-PK(1) cells in a dose dependant manner. These studies indicate that both SOD1 dependent and independent pathways are integral in protection against ATP depletion-recovery mediated cytotoxicity and apoptosis, however more studies are needed to delineate the signaling mechanisms involved.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3146066PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10495-009-0393-zDOI Listing

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