Renal cyclophilin-like protein gene expression parallels changes in sodium excretion in experimental nephrosis and is positively modulated by atrial natriuretic peptide. — Silvia Orisio (1993) | RDL Network
Renal cyclophilin-like protein gene expression parallels changes in sodium excretion in experimental nephrosis and is positively modulated by atrial natriuretic peptide.
Article 1993 en
Authors
SO
Silvia Orisio
NP
Norberto Perico
LB
Luca Benatti
Abstract
1 min read
Experimental evidence is available to indicate that intrarenal mechanisms play a role in the impaired salt excretion of nephrotic syndrome by multiple and still incompletely defined mediators. It is documented herein that the gene encoding for cyclophilin-like protein (Cy-LP) is up-regulated in renal medulla from adriamycin (ADR)-treated rats as compared with control animals. In the cortex of rats with ADR nephrosis, no change in Cy-LP as compared with that in controls was found for the entire observation period. By contrast, in the medulla of nephrotic rats, Cy-LP gene expression was significantly higher than in controls. Values of urinary Na excretion were inversely correlated to Cy-LP mRNA expression levels. Because in ADR nephrosis a blunted natriuretic response to ANP has been previously reported, it was investigated whether ANP infusion modulated Cy-LP mRNA in the renal medulla. ADR-treated rats, but not control rats, infused for 1 h with ANP (1 microgram/kg.min) had a significant (P < 0.05) increase in medullary Cy-LP mRNA as compared with nephrotic animals receiving the vehicle alone. These findings might be taken to suggest that renal Cy-LP gene expression is positively modulated in nephrotic syndrome and parallels changes in sodium excretion.
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