Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8341132 | Microvascular Research | 2015 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The disruption of endothelial integrity is a crucial step for the development of vascular leakage and consequently ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI). Regarding the molecular cell-cell interaction, the fibrinopeptide Bβ15-42 prevents vascular leakage by stabilizing the inter-endothelial junctions via association with the vascular endothelial-cadherin. In a previous study we showed that a renoprotective effect in early IRI may be achieved by intravenous administration of Bβ15-42 at the time of reperfusion. We now aimed to investigate whether additional pre-ischemic application of Bβ15-42 could enhance this effect. Therefore C57BL/6 mice were subjected to 0.5 h bilateral renal ischemia followed by reperfusion. The animals were randomized into 6 groups (n = 6): two control groups treated with i.v. administration of NaCl at reperfusion for 0.5 h (NaCl 1 h) and 2.5 h (NaCl 3 h), two groups with Bβ15-42 at reperfusion for 0.5 h (Bβrep 1 h) and 2.5 h (Bβrep 3 h), and two groups with administration of Bβ15-42 immediately pre-ischemic as well as at reperfusion for 0.5 h (Bβperi 1 h) and 2.5 h (Bβperi 3 h). We found that both Bβrep and Bβperi mice displayed reduced early renal damage compared with NaCl treated mice. However, there was no further reduction of the IR damage through added pre-ischemic application of Bβ15-42. Overall, we detected significantly reduced endothelial activation, lower tissue infiltration of neutrophils as well as lower tissue levels of neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) in all mice treated with Bβ15-42 compared to mice treated with NaCl. Our data confirm the renoprotective effect of Bβ15-42 in the early therapeutic treatment of acute kidney injury due to ischemia and reperfusion. However, a combined pre-and post-ischemic administration of Bβ15-42 appears to provide no additional benefit compared with a sole administration at reperfusion.
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Authors
Anja Urbschat, Katrin Rupprecht, Kai Zacharowski, Nicholas Obermüller, Bertram Scheller, Johannes Holfeld, Can Tepeköylü, Rainer Hofmann, Patrick Paulus,