AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) affects kidney transplant function, particularly looking at how hypoxia and reoxygenation influence proximal transporters in kidney cells.
  • Research involved culturing human tubular cells under different hypoxia and reoxygenation conditions, analyzing changes in transporter gene expression, and using metabolomics to explore metabolic shifts.
  • Findings revealed specific upregulation and downregulation of transporter genes during hypoxia and reoxygenation, though no direct link was found between transporter expression and metabolic changes, suggesting the need for more focused research on individual transporters.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) induces several perturbations that alter immediate kidney graft function after transplantation and may affect long-term graft outcomes. Given the IRI-dependent metabolic disturbances previously reported, we hypothesized that proximal transporters handling endo/exogenous substrates may be victims of such lesions.

Objectives: This study aimed to determine the impact of hypoxia/reoxygenation on the human proximal transport system through two semi-targeted omics analyses.

Methods: Human proximal tubular cells were cultured in hypoxia (6 or 24 h), each followed by 2, 24 or 48-h reoxygenation. We investigated the transcriptomic modulation of transporters. Using semi-targeted LC-MS/MS profiling, we characterized the extra/intracellular metabolome. Statistical modelling was used to identify significant metabolic variations.

Results: The expression profile of transporters was impacted during hypoxia (y + LAT1 and OCTN2), reoxygenation (MRP2, PEPT1/2, rBAT, and OATP4C1), or in both conditions (P-gp and GLUT1). The P-gp and GLUT1 transcripts increased (FC (fold change) = 2.93 and 4.11, respectively) after 2-h reoxygenation preceded by 24-h hypoxia. We observed a downregulation (FC = 0.42) of yLAT1 after 24-h hypoxia, and of PEPT2 after 24-h hypoxia followed by 2-h reoxygenation (FC = 0.40). Metabolomics showed that hypoxia altered the energetic pathways. However, intracellular metabolic homeostasis and cellular exchanges were promptly restored after reoxygenation.

Conclusion: This study provides insight into the transcriptomic response of the tubular transporters to hypoxia/reoxygenation. No correlation was found between the expression of transporters and the metabolic variations observed. Given the complexity of studying the global tubular transport systems, we propose that further studies focus on targeted transporters.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11306-023-02044-4DOI Listing

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