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Effects of ischemia-reperfusion injury on renal ammonia metabolism and the collecting duct

Title
Effects of ischemia-reperfusion injury on renal ammonia metabolism and the collecting duct
Authors
Han K.-H.Kim H.-Y.Croker B.P.Reungjui S.Lee S.-Y.Kim J.Handlogten M.E.Adin C.A.Weiner I.D.
Ewha Authors
한기환
SCOPUS Author ID
한기환scopus
Issue Date
2007
Journal Title
American Journal of Physiology - Renal Physiology
ISSN
0363-6127JCR Link
Citation
American Journal of Physiology - Renal Physiology vol. 293, no. 4, pp. F1342 - F1354
Indexed
SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Acute renal injury induces metabolic acidosis, but its specific effects on the collecting duct, the primary site for urinary ammonia secretion, the primary component of net acid excretion, are incompletely understood. We induced ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) acute renal injury in Sprague-Dawley rats by clamping the renal pedicles bilaterally for 30 min followed by reperfusion for 6 h. Control rats underwent sham surgery without renal pedicle clamping. I/R injury decreased urinary ammonia excretion significantly but did not persistently alter urine volume, Na+, K+, or bicarbonate excretion. Histological examination demonstrated cellular damage in the outer and inner medullary collecting duct, as well as in the proximal tubule and the thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle. A subset of collecting duct cells were damaged and/or detached from the basement membrane; these cells were present predominantly in the outer medulla and were less frequent in the inner medulla. Immunohistochemistry identified that the damaged/detached cells were A-type intercalated cells, not principal cells. Both TdT-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL) staining and transmission electron microscopic examination demonstrated apoptosis but not necrosis. However, immunoreactivity for caspase-3 was observed in the proximal tubule, but not in collecting duct intercalated cells, suggesting that mechanism(s) of collecting duct intercalated cell apoptosis differ from those operative in the proximal tubule. We conclude that I/R injury decreases renal ammonia excretion and is associated with intercalated cell-specific detachment and apoptosis in the outer and inner medullary collecting duct. These effects likely contribute to the metabolic acidosis frequently observed in acute renal injury.
DOI
10.1152/ajprenal.00437.2006
Appears in Collections:
의과대학 > 의학과 > Journal papers
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