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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38496522

ABSTRACT

The kidney functions as a finely tuned sensor to balance body fluid composition and filter out waste through complex coordinated mechanisms. This versatility requires tight neural control, with innervating efferent nerves playing a crucial role in regulating blood flow, glomerular filtration rate, water and sodium reabsorption, and renin release. In turn sensory afferents provide feedback to the central nervous system for the modulation of cardiovascular function. However, the cells targeted by sensory afferents and the physiological sensing mechanisms remain poorly characterized. Moreover, how the kidney is innervated during development to establish these functions remains elusive. Here, we utilized a combination of light-sheet and confocal microscopy to generate anatomical maps of kidney sensory and sympathetic nerves throughout development and resolve the establishment of functional crosstalk. Our analyses revealed that kidney innervation initiates at embryonic day (E)13.5 as the nerves associate with vascular smooth muscle cells and follow arterial differentiation. By E17.5 axonal projections associate with kidney structures such as glomeruli and tubules and the network continues to expand postnatally. These nerves are synapsin I-positive, highlighting ongoing axonogenesis and the potential for functional crosstalk. We show that sensory and sympathetic nerves innervate the kidney concomitantly and classify the sensory fibers as calcitonin gene related peptide (CGRP)+, substance P+, TRPV1+, and PIEZO2+, establishing the presence of PIEZO2 mechanosensory fibers in the kidney. Using retrograde tracing, we identified the primary dorsal root ganglia, T10-L2, from which PIEZO2+ sensory afferents project to the kidney. Taken together our findings elucidate the temporality of kidney innervation and resolve the identity of kidney sympathetic and sensory nerves.

2.
Compr Physiol ; 14(1): 5325-5343, 2023 12 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38158367

ABSTRACT

Red blood cell (RBC) trapping describes the accumulation of RBCs in the microvasculature of the kidney outer medulla that occurs following ischemic acute kidney injury (AKI). Despite its prominence in human kidneys following AKI, as well as evidence from experimental models demonstrating that the severity of RBC trapping is directly correlated with renal recovery, to date, RBC trapping has not been a primary focus in understanding the pathogenesis of ischemic kidney injury. New evidence from rodent models suggests that RBC trapping is responsible for much of the tubular injury occurring in the initial hours after kidney reperfusion from ischemia. This early injury appears to result from RBC cytotoxicity and closely reflects the injury profile observed in human kidneys, including sloughing of the medullary tubules and the formation of heme casts in the distal tubules. In this review, we discuss what is currently known about RBC trapping. We conclude that RBC trapping is likely avoidable. The primary causes of RBC trapping are thought to include rheologic alterations, blood coagulation, tubular cell swelling, and increased vascular permeability; however, new data indicate that a mismatch in blood flow between the cortex and medulla where medullary perfusion is maintained during cortical ischemia is also likely critical. The mechanism(s) by which RBC trapping contributes to renal functional decline require more investigation. We propose a renewed focus on the mechanisms mediating RBC trapping, and RBC trapping-associated injury is likely to provide important knowledge for improving AKI outcomes. © 2024 American Physiological Society. Compr Physiol 14:5325-5343, 2024.


Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury , Kidney , Humans , Acute Kidney Injury/etiology , Acute Kidney Injury/pathology , Ischemia , Erythrocytes/physiology
3.
Function (Oxf) ; 4(6): zqad050, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37753180

ABSTRACT

Red blood cell (RBC) trapping is common in ischemic acute kidney injury (AKI) and presents as densely packed RBCs that accumulate within and engorge the kidney medullary circulation. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that "RBC trapping directly promotes tubular injury independent of extending ischemia time." Studies were performed on rats. Red blood cell congestion and tubular injury were compared between renal arterial clamping, venous clamping, and venous clamping of blood-free kidneys. Vessels were occluded for either 15 or 45 min with and without reperfusion. We found that RBC trapping in the medullary capillaries occurred rapidly following reperfusion from renal arterial clamping and that this was associated with extravasation of blood from congested vessels, uptake of blood proteins by the tubules, and marked tubular injury. To determine if this injury was due to blood toxicity or an extension of ischemia time, we compared renal venous and arterial clamping without reperfusion. Venous clamping resulted in RBC trapping and marked tubular injury within 45 min of ischemia. Conversely, despite the same ischemia time, RBC trapping and tubular injury were minimal following arterial clamping without reperfusion. Confirming the role of blood toward tubular injury, injury was markedly reduced in blood-free kidneys with venous clamping. Our data demonstrate that RBC trapping results in the rapid extravasation and uptake of blood components by tubular cells, causing toxic tubular injury. Tubular toxicity from extravasation of blood following RBC trapping appears to be a major component of tubular injury in ischemic AKI, which has not previously been recognized.


Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury , Vascular System Injuries , Animals , Rats , Erythrocytes , Kidney , Ischemia
4.
Semin Nephrol ; 42(3): 151280, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36460572

ABSTRACT

Acute kidney injury (AKI) represents a sudden reduction in renal function and is a major clinical problem with a high mortality rate. Despite decades of research, there are currently no direct therapies for AKI. The failure of therapeutic approaches identified in rodents to translate to human beings has led to questions regarding the appropriateness of these models. Our recent data indicate that there are two distinct processes driving tubular injury in the commonly used rat model of warm bilateral renal ischemia reperfusion injury, which often is used to mimic ischemic AKI. One results from the period of warm ischemia, manifesting as sublethal injury and coagulative necrosis of the proximal tubules in the renal cortex. This is the predominate type of injury observed 24 hours after reperfusion and the most well studied. The other results from red blood cell congestion of the outer medullary vasculature. This type of injury manifests as cell sloughing, along with the later formation of heme casts that fill distal nephron segments. Cell sloughing from congestion is most prominent in the early hours after reperfusion and often is masked by regeneration of the tubular epithelium by 24 hours postischemia. In this review, we argue that injury from outer medullary red blood cell congestion reflects the pathology observed in human kidneys and likely is representative of injury in most cases of ischemic AKI after shock. Greater focus on this congestive injury is likely to lead to improved translation in AKI.


Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury , Reperfusion Injury , Rats , Humans , Animals , Kidney/metabolism , Acute Kidney Injury/metabolism , Ischemia/complications , Reperfusion Injury/metabolism , Erythrocytes/metabolism , Erythrocytes/pathology
5.
Clin Sci (Lond) ; 136(11): 825-840, 2022 06 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35535709

ABSTRACT

Acute kidney injury (AKI) due to ischemia is a serious and frequent clinical complication with mortality rates as high as 80%. Vascular congestion in the renal outer medulla occurs early after ischemia reperfusion (IR) injury, and congestion has been linked to worsened outcomes following IR. There is evidence implicating both male sex and preexisting hypertension as risk factors for poor outcomes following IR. The present study tested the hypothesis that male spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) have greater vascular congestion and impaired renal recovery following renal IR vs. female SHR and normotensive male Sprague-Dawley rats (SD). Thirteen-week-old male and female SHR and SD were subjected to sham surgery or 30 min of warm bilateral ischemia followed by reperfusion. Rats were euthanized 24 h or 7 days post-IR. IR increased renal injury in all groups vs. sham controls at 24 h. At 7 days post-IR, injury remained elevated only in male SHR. Histological examination of SD and SHR kidneys 24 h post-IR showed vascular congestion in males and females. Vascular congestion was sustained only in male SHR 7 days post-IR. To assess the role of vascular congestion on impaired recovery following IR, additional male and female SHR were pretreated with heparin (200 U/kg) prior to IR. Heparin pretreatment reduced IR-induced vascular congestion and improved renal function in male SHR 7 days post-IR. Interestingly, preventing increases in blood pressure (BP) in male SHR did not alter sustained vascular congestion. Our data demonstrate that IR-induced vascular congestion is a major driving factor for impaired renal recovery in male SHR.


Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury , Hypertension , Reperfusion Injury , Acute Kidney Injury/pathology , Animals , Female , Heparin/therapeutic use , Hypertension/drug therapy , Ischemia/pathology , Kidney/pathology , Male , Perfusion/adverse effects , Rats , Rats, Inbred SHR , Rats, Sprague-Dawley , Reperfusion Injury/pathology
6.
J Am Soc Nephrol ; 33(4): 769-785, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35115326

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Vascular congestion of the renal medulla-trapped red blood cells in the medullary microvasculature-is a hallmark finding at autopsy in patients with ischemic acute tubular necrosis. Despite this, the pathogenesis of vascular congestion is not well defined. METHODS: In this study, to investigate the pathogenesis of vascular congestion and its role in promoting renal injury, we assessed renal vascular congestion and tubular injury after ischemia reperfusion in rats pretreated with low-dose LPS or saline (control). We used laser Doppler flowmetry to determine whether pretreatment with low-dose LPS prevented vascular congestion by altering renal hemodynamics during reperfusion. RESULTS: We found that vascular congestion originated during the ischemic period in the renal venous circulation. In control animals, the return of blood flow was followed by the development of congestion in the capillary plexus of the outer medulla and severe tubular injury early in reperfusion. Laser Doppler flowmetry indicated that blood flow returned rapidly to the medulla, several minutes before recovery of full cortical perfusion. In contrast, LPS pretreatment prevented both the formation of medullary congestion and its associated tubular injury. Laser Doppler flowmetry in LPS-pretreated rats suggested that limiting early reperfusion of the medulla facilitated this protective effect, because it allowed cortical perfusion to recover and clear congestion from the large cortical veins, which also drain the medulla. CONCLUSIONS: Blockage of the renal venous vessels and a mismatch in the timing of cortical and medullary reperfusion results in congestion of the outer medulla's capillary plexus and promotes early tubular injury after renal ischemia. These findings indicate that hemodynamics during reperfusion contribute to the renal medulla's susceptibility to ischemic injury.


Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury , Reperfusion Injury , Acute Kidney Injury/etiology , Acute Kidney Injury/pathology , Acute Kidney Injury/prevention & control , Animals , Humans , Ischemia/complications , Kidney/pathology , Kidney Medulla/blood supply , Lipopolysaccharides , Rats , Renal Circulation/physiology , Reperfusion/adverse effects , Reperfusion Injury/complications , Reperfusion Injury/pathology , Reperfusion Injury/prevention & control
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