Haptoglobin reduces renal oxidative DNA and tissue damage during phenylhydrazine-induced hemolysis
Kidney International 58(3): 1033-1044
Article 2000 English
Authors
YL
Yew Koon Lim
AJ
Andrew M. Jenner
AA
Azhar Ali
Abstract
1 min read
Haptoglobin reduces renal oxidative DNA and tissue damage during phenylhydrazine-induced hemolysis.
Background
Haptoglobin knockout (Hp-/-) mice are more sensitive to phenylhydrazine-induced hemolysis than Hp+/+ mice.
Methods
Hemolysis was induced in Hp-/- and Hp+/+ mice using phenylhydrazine. Relative renal tissue damage and function were then assessed.
Results
Hp-/- mice had higher basal levels of renal lipid peroxidation, as evidenced by levels of malonaldehyde and 4-hydroxy-2(E)-nonenal (MDA/HNE). After the administration of phenylhydrazine, levels of 8-hydroxyguanine (but not other products of oxidative DNA damage) were significantly elevated in the renal DNA. There was also increased induction of heme oxygenase-1. The more severe renal damage in Hp-/- mice was also evident in the delayed erythropoietin gene expression and poorer renal clearance of 3H-inulin. This reduction in glomerular filtration function in Hp+/+ and Hp-/- mice could be restored to baseline by vasodilators (prazosin or diazoxide), implicating renal vasoconstriction as a major mechanism of acute renal failure during induced hemolysis. Precipitation of hemoglobin in the kidney was not increased in Hp-/- mice.
Conclusions
Haptoglobin appears to play an important physiological role as an antioxidant, particularly during hemolysis.
Philippe Froguel, Ndeye Coumba Ndiaye, Amélie Bonnefond, Nabila Bouatia‐Naji, Aurélie Dechaume, Gérard Siest, Bernard Herbeth, Mario Falchi, Leonardo Bottolo, Rosa‐Maria Guéant‐Rodriguez, Cécile Lecœur, Michel R. Langlois, Yann Labrune, Aimo Ruokonen, Saïd El Shamieh, Maria G. Stathopoulou, Anita Morandi, Claudio Maffeis, Stephen Eyre, Joris R. Delanghe, Peter Jacobson, Lars Sjöström, Lena Carlsson, ,
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