Acute Kidney Injury Induces Oxidative Stress and Hepatic Lipid Accumulation through AMPK Signaling Pathway.
Kathy K W Au-YeungYue ShangCharith U B WijerathneSusara Madduma HewageYaw Chris SiowKarmin OPublished in: Antioxidants (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Acute kidney injury (AKI) often impairs the function of other organs leading to distant organ injury. The liver is the major organ that regulates metabolism and lipid homeostasis in the body. It has been reported that AKI causes liver injury with increased oxidative stress, inflammatory response and steatosis. In the present study, we investigated the mechanisms by which ischemia-reperfusion-induced AKI caused hepatic lipid accumulation. Kidney ischemia (45 min)-reperfusion (24 h) led to a significant increase in plasma creatinine and transaminase in Sprague Dawley rats, indicating kidney and liver injury. Histological and biochemical analyses revealed hepatic lipid accumulation with a significant elevation of triglyceride and cholesterol levels in the liver. This was accompanied by a decreased AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) phosphorylation, indicating the reduced activation of AMPK, which is an energy sensor that regulates lipid metabolism. The expression of AMPK-regulated genes that were responsible for fatty acid oxidation (CPTIα, ACOX) was significantly decreased, while the expression of lipogenesis genes (SREPB-1c, ACC1) was significantly elevated. The oxidative stress biomarker malondialdehyde was elevated in the plasma and liver. Incubation of HepG2 cells with an oxidative stress inducer hydrogen peroxide inhibited AMPK phosphorylation and caused cellular lipid accumulation. This was accompanied by decreased expression of genes responsible for fatty acid oxidation and increased expression of genes responsible for lipogenesis. These results suggest that AKI elicits hepatic lipid accumulation through decreased fatty acid metabolism and increased lipogenesis. Oxidative stress may contribute, in part, to the downregulation of the AMPK signaling pathway leading to hepatic lipid accumulation and injury.
Keyphrases
- protein kinase
- acute kidney injury
- oxidative stress
- liver injury
- fatty acid
- drug induced
- hydrogen peroxide
- poor prognosis
- diabetic rats
- signaling pathway
- cardiac surgery
- induced apoptosis
- skeletal muscle
- inflammatory response
- genome wide
- dna damage
- pi k akt
- nitric oxide
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- binding protein
- cell proliferation
- toll like receptor
- bioinformatics analysis
- high fat diet induced
- heart failure
- lymph node
- single cell
- insulin resistance
- heat shock
- mass spectrometry
- acute myocardial infarction
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- high glucose
- type diabetes
- gene expression
- percutaneous coronary intervention