Reduction of proteinuria in adriamycin-induced nephropathy is associated with reduction of renal kidney injury molecule (Kim-1) over time

AB Kramer, MM van Timmeren… - … of physiology-renal …, 2009 - journals.physiology.org
AB Kramer, MM van Timmeren, TA Schuurs, VS Vaidya, JV Bonventre, H van Goor, G Navis
American journal of physiology-renal physiology, 2009journals.physiology.org
Tubulointerstitial lesions are important in the progression of proteinuric renal disease.
Tubular kidney injury molecule-1 (Kim-1) is induced in acute renal injury and reversible as a
natural course. Kim-1 is also present in chronic renal damage; however, the dynamics of
Kim-1 in chronic renal damage and effects of antiproteinuric treatment on Kim-1 are
unknown. We studied Kim-1 in adriamycin nephrosis (AN) before and after renin-
angiotensin system blockade. A renal biopsy was taken 6 wk after adriamycin injection to …
Tubulointerstitial lesions are important in the progression of proteinuric renal disease. Tubular kidney injury molecule-1 (Kim-1) is induced in acute renal injury and reversible as a natural course. Kim-1 is also present in chronic renal damage; however, the dynamics of Kim-1 in chronic renal damage and effects of antiproteinuric treatment on Kim-1 are unknown. We studied Kim-1 in adriamycin nephrosis (AN) before and after renin-angiotensin system blockade. A renal biopsy was taken 6 wk after adriamycin injection to study renal damage and Kim-1 expression. Subsequently, ACE inhibition (ACEi; n = 23), angiotensin II antagonist (AT1A; n = 23), or vehicle (n = 10) was given for 6 wk; healthy rats served as controls (CON; n = 8). In AN, renal Kim-1 mRNA was induced 26-fold vs. CON at week 6, with further increase in vehicle to week 12 (40-fold) but was reduced by ACEi and AT1A to 10- and 12-fold vs. CON (P < 0.05 vs. week 6). Kim-1 protein was undetectable in CON; in AN, it was present in brush border of dilated tubules in areas with adjacent interstitial lesions. Renal Kim-1 protein levels increased from weeks 6–12 in vehicle and decreased in ACEi- and AT1A-treated groups (P < 0.05). In vehicle, urinary Kim-1 was increased (P < 0.05 vs. CON), with a reduction by ACEi and AT1A (P < 0.05 vs. vehicle). Renal and urinary Kim-1 correlated with proteinuria and interstitial damage cross-sectionally. Reductions in proteinuria and renal Kim-1 correlated, which was not associated by corresponding changes in tubulointerstitial fibrosis. In conclusion, on longitudinal follow-up during antiproteinuric treatment increased renal Kim-1 expression is reversible in proportion to proteinuria reduction, likely reflecting reversibility of early tubular injury, supporting its potential as a biomarker for tubulointerstitial processes of damage and repair.
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