- Home
- Featured Publications
- Center Publications
- Obesity-associated glomerular inflammation increases albuminuria without renal histological changes.
Obesity-associated glomerular inflammation increases albuminuria without renal histological changes.
Citation | “Obesity-Associated Glomerular Inflammation Increases Albuminuria Without Renal Histological Changes.”. Febs Open Bio, pp. 664-670. . |
Center | Joslin Diabetes Center |
Author | Akira Mima, Toshinori Yasuzawa, George L King, Shigeru Ueshima |
Keywords | CKD, inflammation, NF‐κB, albuminuria, obesity |
Abstract |
Obesity is one of risk factors for chronic kidney disease (CKD), but the precise mechanism involved is unclear. This study characterizes the effect of obesity-induced glomerular inflammation, oxidative stress, and albuminuria in obese rats. Glomerular samples were collected from fatty (ZF) and lean (ZL) Zucker rats. After 2 months of feeding, body weight and albuminuria were significantly increased in ZF rats when compared to ZL rats. Expression of the inflammatory markers TNF-α and CCR2 was significantly increased in the glomeruli of ZF rats. However, expression of IL-6 mRNA was not increased. Analysis of renal pathology showed no glomerular expansion. As inflammatory and oxidative stress markers are associated with NF-κB, we evaluated whether NF-κB activation was increased in the glomeruli of mice on a high-fat diet. Immunohistochemistry showed increased NF-κB activation in the glomeruli when transgenic mice overexpressing an NF-κB-dependent enhanced green fluorescent protein were fed with a high-fat diet. These results suggest that obesity of only 2 months duration can cause albuminuria, due to increased inflammation or oxidative stress, but may not be long enough to develop renal pathological changes. |
Year of Publication |
2018
|
Journal |
FEBS open bio
|
Volume |
8
|
Issue |
4
|
Number of Pages |
664-670
|
Date Published |
12/2018
|
ISSN Number |
2211-5463
|
DOI |
10.1002/2211-5463.12400
|
Alternate Journal |
FEBS Open Bio
|
PMID |
29632818
|
PMCID |
PMC5881532
|
Download citation |