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Nitric oxide production by glomerular podocytes.

Citation
Palygin, O., et al. “Nitric Oxide Production By Glomerular Podocytes.”. Nitric Oxide : Biology And Chemistry, pp. 24-31.
Center University of Chicago
Author Oleg Palygin, Daria Ilatovskaya V, Vladislav Levchenko, Bradley T Endres, Aron M Geurts, Alexander Staruschenko
Keywords Angiotensin II, DAF-FM, Dahl salt-sensitive rat, Hydrogen peroxide, hypertension, nitric oxide
Abstract

Nitric Oxide (NO), a potent vasodilator and vital signaling molecule, has been shown to contribute to the regulation of glomerular ultrafiltration. However, whether changes in NO occur in podocytes during the pathogenesis of salt-sensitive hypertension has not yet been thoroughly examined. We showed here that podocytes produce NO, and further hypothesized that hypertensive animals would exhibit reduced NO production in these cells in response to various paracrine factors, which might contribute to the damage of glomeruli filtration barrier and development of proteinuria. To test this, we isolated glomeruli from the kidneys of Dahl salt-sensitive (SS) rats fed a low salt (LS; 0.4% NaCl) or high salt (HS; 4% NaCl, 3 weeks) diets and loaded podocytes with either a combination of NO and Ca fluorophores (DAF-FM and Fura Red, respectively) or DAF-FM alone. Changes in fluorescence were observed with confocal microscopy in response to adenosine triphosphate (ATP), angiotensin II (Ang II), and hydrogen peroxide (HO). Application of Ang II resulted in activation of both NO and intracellular calcium ([Ca]) transients. In contrast, ATP promoted [Ca] transients, but did not have any effects on NO production. SS rats fed a HS diet for 3 weeks demonstrated impaired NO production: the response to Ang II or HO in podocytes of glomeruli isolated from SS rats fed a HS diet was significantly reduced compared to rats fed a LS diet. Therefore, glomerular podocytes from hypertensive rats showed a diminished NO release in response to Ang II or oxidative stress, suggesting that podocytic NO signaling is dysfunctional in this condition and likely contributes to the development of kidney injury.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Nitric oxide : biology and chemistry
Volume
72
Number of Pages
24-31
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1089-8611
DOI
10.1016/j.niox.2017.11.005
Alternate Journal
Nitric Oxide
PMID
29128399
PMCID
PMC5776695
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