Plasma Protein Carbonyls as Biomarkers of Oxidative Stress in Chronic Kidney Disease, Dialysis, and Transplantation.
Graziano ColomboFrancesco ReggianiClaudio AngeliniSilvia FinazziEmanuela AstoriMaria L GaravagliaLucia LandoniNicola M PortinaroDaniela GiustariniRanieri RossiAnnalisa SantucciAldo MilzaniSalvatore BadalamentiIsabella Dalle-DonnePublished in: Oxidative medicine and cellular longevity (2020)
Accumulating evidence indicates that oxidative stress plays a role in the pathophysiology of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and its progression; during renal replacement therapy, oxidative stress-derived oxidative damage also contributes to the development of CKD systemic complications, such as cardiovascular disease, hypertension, atherosclerosis, inflammation, anaemia, and impaired host defence. The main mechanism underlying these events is the retention of uremic toxins, which act as a substrate for oxidative processes and elicit the activation of inflammatory pathways targeting endothelial and immune cells. Due to the growing worldwide spread of CKD, there is an overwhelming need to find oxidative damage biomarkers that are easy to measure in biological fluids of subjects with CKD and patients undergoing renal replacement therapy (haemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, and kidney transplantation), in order to overcome limitations of invasive monitoring of CKD progression. Several studies investigated biomarkers of protein oxidative damage in CKD, including plasma protein carbonyls (PCO), the most frequently used biomarker of protein damage. This review provides an up-to-date overview on advances concerning the correlation between plasma protein carbonylation in CKD progression (from stage 1 to stage 5) and the possibility that haemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, and kidney transplantation improve plasma PCO levels. Despite the fact that the role of plasma PCO in CKD is often underestimated in clinical practice, emerging evidence highlights that plasma PCO can serve as good biomarkers of oxidative stress in CKD and substitutive therapies. Whether plasma PCO levels merely serve as biomarkers of CKD-related oxidative stress or whether they are associated with the pathogenesis of CKD complications deserves further evaluation.
Keyphrases
- chronic kidney disease
- end stage renal disease
- oxidative stress
- peritoneal dialysis
- kidney transplantation
- cardiovascular disease
- dna damage
- patients undergoing
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- protein protein
- diabetic rats
- clinical practice
- blood pressure
- induced apoptosis
- amino acid
- type diabetes
- risk factors
- mass spectrometry
- signaling pathway
- endothelial cells
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells