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The presented study describes renal tubular epithelial cells morphology in rats during adriamycin therapy. It was demonstrated that one dose of the compound can induce increasing-with time-apoptosis in the cells. A statistically-significant increase in the number of apoptotic cells was observed in experimental groups compared to controls. The highest percentage of apoptotic cells was found in rats 7 weeks after adriamycin administration. The number of apoptotic cells in these animals was statistically significantly higher than that in the rats 4 weeks after adriamycin administration.
The study was performed on 16 albino Wistar female rats divided into two equal groups: experimental and control. The rats from the experimental group received per os, every second day for 2 weeks 40 mg/kg b.w. of L-arginine. The rats from the control group received, in the same manner, 2 ml of distilled water. The animals were decapitated after 3 weeks of the experiment. After decapitation specimens from the kidneys were collected, fixed in 10% formalin, and then embedded in paraffin blocks. Protein caspase 3 was detected using the standard three step immunohistochemical method. Additionally, the apoptotic index was evaluated. The study shows that L-arginine, as a donor of exogenous nitric oxide, induced the apoptotic signal in normal renal tubular cells of the rats. The apoptotic index statistically significantly increased in the epithelial cells of the treated renal tubules compared to the control. The immunohistochemical reaction for the executing caspase 3 in the renal tubular cells, although increased in comparison with the control, was statistically insignificant.
Apart from Na,K-ATPase, a second sodium pump, Na-stimulated, ^-independ­ent ATPase (Na -ATPase) is expressed in proximal convoluted tubule of the mamma­lian kidney. The aim of this study was to develop a method of Na -ATPase assay based on the method previously used by us to measure Na ,K -ATPase activity (Acta Biochim Polon.; 2002, 49: 515-27). The ATPase activity was assayed as the amount of inorganic phosphate liberated from ATP by isolated microsomal fraction. Na -ATPase activity was calculated as the difference between the activities mea­sured in the presence and in the absence of 50 mM NaCl. Na -ATPase activity was detected in the renal cortex (3.5 ± 0.2 ^mol phosphate/h per mg protein), but not in the renal medulla. Na -ATPase was not inhibited by ouabain or an H ,K -ATPase in­hibitor, Sch 28080, but was almost completely blocked by 2 mM furosemide. Leptin administered intraperitoneally (1 mg/kg) decreased the Na ,K -ATPase activity in the renal medulla at 0.5 and 1 h by 22.1% and 27.1%, respectively, but had no effect on Na -ATPase in the renal cortex. Chronic hyperleptinemia induced by repeated subcutaneous leptin injections (0.25 mg/kg twice daily for 7 days) increased cortical Na,K-ATPase, medullary Na,K-ATPase and cortical Na+-ATPase by 32.4%, 84.2% and 62.9%, respectively. In rats with dietary-induced obesity, the Na ,K - ATPase activity was higher in the renal cortex and medulla by 19.7% and 34.3%, re­spectively, but Na -ATPase was not different from control. These data indicate that both renal Na -dependent ATPases are separately regulated and that up-regulation of Na -ATPase may contribute to Na retention and arterial hypertension induced by chronic hyperleptinemia.
Cyclic AMP-protein kinase A (PKA) pathway plays an important role in signal transduction in renal tubular cells, however, its role in transport regulation is not completely established. The aim of this study was to investigate in vivo the effect of PKA on renal Na+, K+-ATPase activity. The study was performed in male Wistar rats. The animals were anaesthetized with pentobarbital and investigated drugs were infused through the catheter inserted into the abdominal aorta. Na+,K+-ATPase activity was assayed in an isolated microsomal fraction of the renal cortex and medulla. Cell-permeable cAMP analogue, dibutyryl-cAMP (db-cAMP), dose-dependently stimulated Na+,K+-ATPase in the renal cortex and inhibited in the renal medulla. Maximal stimulation (+38.5%) and inhibition (-46.8%) were observed at a dose of 10-6 mol/kg/min. Measurement of Na+,K+-ATPase activity at different Na+ concentrations revealed that in the renal cortex db-cAMP increased Vmax of the enzyme without any effect on sodium affinity, whereas in the renal medulla decrease in Vmax was accompanied by decreased sodium affinity, evidenced by elevated K0.5 for sodium. The effect of db-cAMP was mimicked by the infusion of either adenylate cyclase activator, forskolin, or inhibitor of phosphodiesterase, IBMX. Both stimulatory and inhibitory effects of db-cAMP were prevented by pretreatment with protein kinase A inhibitor, KT 5720 (10-8 mol/kg/min) but not by inhibitor of protein kinase G, KT 5823. The inhibitory effect in the renal medulla was partially blocked by pretreatment with either ethoxyresorufin or 17-ODYA – two nonspecific inhibitors of cytochrome P450-dependent arachidonate metabolism, whereas an inhibitor of epoxygenase, miconazole, was not effective. Infusion of 20-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (20-HETE) at a dose of 10-10 mol/kg/min decreased medullary Na+,K+-ATPase activity by 24.2%. Exogenous protein phosphatases inhibitor, okadaic acid (OA, 10-8-10-7 mol/kg/min) caused dose-dependent decrease in renal medullary Na+,K+-ATPase activity, maximally by 31.9%, but had no effect in the renal cortex. The effects of OA and db-cAMP in the renal medulla were not additive. When OA administration (10-7 mol/kg/min) was followed by 20-HETE (10-10 mol/kg/min), medullary Na+,K+-ATPase activity decreased by 48.6% and was similar as after db-cAMP. We conclude, that cAMP-PKA pathway activates Na+,K+-ATPase in the renal cortex and inhibits in the renal medulla. The inhibitory effect is partially mediated by cytochrome P450-dependent arachidonate metabolites and possibly also by PKA-dependent inhibition of protein phosphatases.
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