Publication | Open Access
Inorganic iron effects on in vitro hypoxic proximal renal tubular cell injury.
43
Citations
27
References
1993
Year
Iron AdditionRenal IschemiaIron MetabolismLipid PeroxidationRenal PathologyRenal InflammationIron DeficiencyCatalytic IronRedox BiologyOxidative StressRenal FunctionToxicologyKidney Tubule RemodelingAcute Kidney InjuryChronic Kidney DiseaseInorganic Iron EffectsBiochemistryHypoxia (Medicine)Renal PathophysiologyReactive Oxygen SpeciePhysiologyMetabolismMedicineNephrologyKidney ResearchHepcidin
Iron-dependent free radical reactions and renal ischemia are believed to be critical mediators of myohemoglobinuric acute renal failure. Thus, this study assessed whether catalytic iron exacerbates O2 deprivation-induced proximal tubular injury, thereby providing an insight into this form of renal failure. Isolated rat proximal tubular segments (PTS) were subjected to either hypoxia/reoxygenation (H/R: 27:15 min), "chemical anoxia" (antimycin A; 7.5 microM x 45 min), or continuous oxygenated incubation +/- ferrous (Fe2+) or ferric (Fe3+) iron addition. Cell injury (% lactic dehydrogenase [LDH] release), lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde, [MDA]), and ATP depletion were assessed. Under oxygenated conditions, Fe2+ and Fe3+ each raised MDA (approximately 7-10x) and decreased ATP (approximately 25%). Fe2+, but not Fe3+, caused LDH release (31 +/- 2%). During hypoxia, Fe2+ and Fe3+ worsened ATP depletion; however, each decreased LDH release (approximately 31 to approximately 22%; P < 0.01). Fe(2+)-mediated protection was negated during reoxygenation because Fe2+ exerted its intrinsic cytotoxic effect (LDH release: Fe2+ alone, 31 +/- 2%; H/R 36 +/- 2%; H/R + Fe2+, 41 +/- 2%). However, Fe(3+)-mediated protection persisted throughout reoxygenation because it induced no direct cytotoxicity (H/R, 39 +/- 2%; H/R + Fe3+, 25 +/- 2%; P < 0.002). Fe3+ also decreased antimycin toxicity (41 +/- 4 vs. 25 +/- 3%; P < 0.001) despite inducing marked lipid peroxidation and without affecting ATP. These results indicate that catalytic iron can mitigate, rather than exacerbate, O2 deprivation/reoxygenation PTS injury.
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