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Evidence of blood and muscle redox status imbalance in experimentally induced renal insufficiency in a rabbit model

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Autore
Poulianiti K.P., Karioti A., Kaltsatou A., Mitrou G.I., Koutedakis Y., Tepetes K., Christodoulidis G., Giakas G., Maridaki M.D., Stefanidis I., Jamurtas A.Z., Sakkas G.K., Karatzaferi C.
Data
2019
Language
en
DOI
10.1155/2019/8219283
Soggetto
Blood
Peptides
Blood redox status
Chronic kidney disease
Glutathione reductase
Protein carbonyls
Reduced glutathione
Thiobarbituric acid reactive substances
Tissue specifics
Total antioxidant capacities (TAC)
Muscle
carbonyl derivative
catalase
creatinine
glutathione
glutathione disulfide
glutathione reductase
hemoglobin
thiobarbituric acid reactive substance
urea
catalase
glutathione disulfide
animal cell
animal experiment
animal model
animal tissue
antioxidant activity
Article
blood sampling
controlled study
creatinine blood level
enzyme activity
experimental renal failure
female
hemoglobin blood level
New Zealand White (rabbit)
nonhuman
protein blood level
psoas muscle
rabbit model
redox stress
skeletal muscle
soleus muscle
urea blood level
uremia
animal
blood
disease model
kidney failure
Leporidae
metabolism
oxidation reduction reaction
protein carbonylation
skeletal muscle
Acids
Blood
Capacity
Control Systems
Organizations
Peptides
Stresses
Tissue
Animals
Catalase
Disease Models, Animal
Female
Glutathione Disulfide
Muscle, Skeletal
Oxidation-Reduction
Protein Carbonylation
Rabbits
Renal Insufficiency
Uremia
Hindawi Limited
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Abstract
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is accompanied by a disturbed redox homeostasis, especially in end-stage patients, which is associated with pathological complications such as anemia, atherosclerosis, and muscle atrophy. However, limited evidence exists about redox disturbances before the end stage of CKD. Moreover, the available redox literature has not yet provided clear associations between circulating and tissue-specific (muscle) oxidative stress levels. The aim of the study was to evaluate commonly used redox status indices in the blood and in two different types of skeletal muscle (psoas, soleus) in the predialysis stages of CKD, using an animal model of renal insufficiency, and to investigate whether blood redox status indices could be reflecting the skeletal muscle redox status. Indices evaluated included reduced glutathione (GSH), oxidized glutathione (GSSG), glutathione reductase (GR), catalase (CAT), total antioxidant capacity (TAC), protein carbonyls (PC), and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS). Results showed that blood GSH was higher in the uremic group compared to the control (17 50 ± 1 73 vs. 12 43 ± 1 01, p = 0 033). In both muscle types, PC levels were higher in the uremic group compared to the control (psoas: 1 086 ± 0 294 vs. 0 596 ± 0 372, soleus: 2 52 ± 0 29 vs. 0 929 ± 0 41, p < 0 05). The soleus had higher levels of TBARS, PC, GSH, CAT, and GR and lower TAC compared to the psoas in both groups. No significant correlations in redox status indices between the blood and skeletal muscles were found. However, in the uremic group, significant correlations between the psoas and soleus muscles in PC, GSSG, and CAT levels emerged, not present in the control. Even in the early stages of CKD, a disturbance in redox homeostasis was observed, which seemed to be muscle type-specific, while blood levels of redox indices did not seem to reflect the intramuscular condition. The above results highlight the need for further research in order to identify the key mechanisms driving the onset and progression of oxidative stress and its detrimental effects on CKD patients. © 2019 Konstantina P. Poulianiti et al.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/78338
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  • Δημοσιεύσεις σε περιοδικά, συνέδρια, κεφάλαια βιβλίων κλπ. [19735]

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