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Effects of Dietary Salt Restriction on Renal Progression and Interstitial Fibrosis in Adriamycin Nephrosis

Authors
Park, Joon-SungKim, SuaJo, Chor HoOh, Il HwanKim, Gheun-Ho
Issue Date
May-2014
Publisher
S. Karger AG
Keywords
Fibrosis; Dietary NaCl; Doxorubucin; NF-kappa B; NADPH oxidase
Citation
Kidney and Blood Pressure Research, v.39, no.1, pp 86 - 96
Pages
11
Indexed
SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Kidney and Blood Pressure Research
Volume
39
Number
1
Start Page
86
End Page
96
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/160013
DOI
10.1159/000355782
ISSN
1420-4096
1423-0143
Abstract
Background/Aims: Although high salt intake is thought to accelerate renal progression in proteinuric kidney disease, it is not known whether strict dietary salt restriction could delay renal inflammation and interstitial fibrosis. Here, we sought to answer this question in a rat model of adriamycin-induced nephrotic syndrome. Methods: Adriamycin was administered via the femoral vein in a single bolus (7.5 mg/kg), and the rats were put on a sodium-deficient rodent diet. Rats with intact kidneys were studied for 5 weeks (experiment 1), and uninephrectomized rats were studied for 6 weeks (experiment 2). Results: In experiment 1, restricting salt intake improved renal tubulointerstitial histopathology in adriamycin-treated rats. Immunohistochemical and immunoblot results additionally showed that restricting dietary salt lowered adriamycin-induced expression of osteopontin, collagen III, and fibronectin. In experiment 2, salt restriction improved adriamycin-induced azotemia, although it did not affect proteinuria or blood pressure. Dietary salt restriction also reduced adriamycin-induced infiltration of ED1-positive cells and the upregulated expression of osteopontin and alpha-SMA. Masson's trichrome and Sirius red staining revealed that salt restriction slowed adriamycin-induced progression of renal interstitial fibrosis. Finally, qPCR revealed that adriamycin-induced expression of TNF-alpha, I.B-alpha, gp91(phox), p47(phox), and p67(phox) mRNA was blocked by salt restriction. Conclusion: Our findings demonstrate that strict dietary salt restriction delays the progress of renal inflammation and fibrosis in proteinuric kidney disease, most likely via relieving the reactive oxygen species-mediated NF-kappa B activation.
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