Targeting ROS and cPLA2/COX2 Expressions Ameliorated Renal Damage in Obese Mice with Endotoxemia.
Jia-Feng ChangJih-Chen YehChun-Ta HoShih-Hao LiuChih-Yu HsiehTing-Ming WangShu-Wei ChangI-Ta LeeKuo-Yang HuangJen-Yu WangWei-Ning LinPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2019)
Obesity is associated with metabolic endotoxemia, reactive oxygen species (ROS), chronic inflammation, and obese kidney fibrosis. Although the fat-intestine-kidney axis has been documented, the pathomechanism and therapeutic targets of obese kidney fibrosis remain unelucidated. To mimic obese humans with metabolic endotoxemia, high-fat-diet-fed mice (HF group) were injected with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to yield the obese kidney fibrosis-metabolic endotoxemia mouse model (HL group). Therapeutic effects of ROS, cytosolic phospholipases A2 (cPLA2) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitors were analyzed with a quantitative comparison of immunohistochemistry stains and morphometric approach in the tubulointerstitium of different groups. Compared with basal and HF groups, the HL group exhibited the most prominent obese kidney fibrosis, tubular epithelial lipid vacuoles, and lymphocyte infiltration in the tubulointerstitium. Furthermore, inhibitors of nonspecific ROS, cPLA2 and COX-2 ameliorated the above renal damages. Notably, the ROS-inhibitor-treated group ameliorated not only oxidative injury but also the expression of cPLA2 and COX-2, indicating that ROS functions as the upstream signaling molecule in the inflammatory cascade of obese kidney fibrosis. ROS acts as a key messenger in the signaling transduction of obese kidney fibrosis, activating downstream cPLA2 and COX-2. The given antioxidant treatment ameliorates obese kidney fibrosis resulting from a combined high-fat diet and LPS-ROS could serve as a potential therapeutic target of obese kidney fibrosis with metabolic endotoxemia.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- reactive oxygen species
- high fat diet
- weight loss
- metabolic syndrome
- insulin resistance
- cell death
- type diabetes
- dna damage
- obese patients
- oxidative stress
- bariatric surgery
- mouse model
- lps induced
- inflammatory response
- heart failure
- high resolution
- body mass index
- risk assessment
- long non coding rna
- climate change
- toll like receptor
- drug delivery
- mass spectrometry
- fatty acid
- endothelial cells
- human health
- drug induced
- replacement therapy