Alterations in renal degradation of albumin in early experimental diabetes in the rat: a new factor in the mechanism of albuminuria

1998 ◽  
Vol 95 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa J. BURNE ◽  
Sianna PANAGIOTOPOULOS ◽  
George JERUMS ◽  
Wayne D. COMPER

1.Albumin is normally excreted as a mixture of intact protein and fragments that are produced during renal passage. The purpose of this study was to investigate the ratio of intact versus degraded forms of excreted albumin to ascertain whether changes in this ratio could account for the apparent increase in albumin excretion seen in diabetes, as measured by standard radioimmunoassay techniques. 2.Four-week male Sprague–Dawley rats with streptozotocin-induced diabetes and age-matched control rats were intravenously injected with [3H]albumin. Urine collected over 2 h was analysed by size exclusion chromatography and radioimmunoassay. A standard radioimmunoassay found a 7-fold increase in albumin excretion rate in diabetic rats, whereas there was only a 2-fold increase in albumin excretion (intact plus fragments). Urine analysed by size exclusion chromatography showed severe degradation for control rats (% monomer = 4±2%); in diabetic rats there was a significant amount of monomer albumin excreted, along with moderately degraded and heavily degraded albumin (% monomer = 17±5%). 3.This study has shown that the radioimmunoassay, which specifically detects intact albumin, considerably underestimates the amount of total urinary albumin which consists of intact and degraded material. The increase in albumin excretion rate observed in diabetes as measured by radioimmunoassay is mainly due to a change in the amount of intact albumin excreted and this is specifically due to the inhibition of albumin degradation at a post-glomerular site and not due to the onset of any type of glomerular ‘shunt' pathway.

Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 866
Author(s):  
Basma G. Eid ◽  
Thikryat Neamatallah ◽  
Abeer Hanafy ◽  
Hany M. El-Bassossy ◽  
Lenah Binmahfouz ◽  
...  

The role of cannabinoid receptors in nephropathy is gaining much attention. This study investigated the effects of two neutral CB1 receptor antagonists, AM6545 and AM4113, on nephropathy associated with metabolic syndrome (MetS). MetS was induced in rats by high-fructose high-salt feeding for 12 weeks. AM6545, the peripheral silent antagonist and AM4113, the central neutral antagonist were administered in the last 4 weeks. At the end of study, blood and urine samples were collected for biochemical analyses while the kidneys were excised for histopathological investigation and transforming growth factor beta 1 (TGFβ1) measurement. MetS was associated with deteriorated kidney function as indicated by the elevated proteinuria and albumin excretion rate. Both compounds equally inhibited the elevated proteinuria and albumin excretion rate while having no effect on creatinine clearance and blood pressure. In addition, AM6545 and AM4113 alleviated the observed swelling and inflammatory cells infiltration in different kidney structures. Moreover, AM6545 and AM4113 alleviated the observed histopathological alterations in kidney structure of MetS rats. MetS was associated with a ten-fold increase in urine uric acid while both compounds blocked this increase. Furthermore, AM6545 and AM4113 completely prevented the collagen deposition and the elevated expression of the TGFβ1 seen in MetS animals. In conclusion, AM6545 and AM4113, possess reno-protective effects by interfering with TGFβ1-mediated renal inflammation and fibrosis, via peripheral action.


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