Publication | Closed Access
Moderate aging does not exacerbate cisplatin-induced kidney injury or fibrosis despite altered inflammatory cytokine expression and immune cell infiltration
19
Citations
30
References
2018
Year
AgingImmunologyCell DeathBiogerontologyKidney InjuryAging ProcessInflammationLongevityAcute Kidney InjuryChronic Kidney DiseaseAutoimmune DiseaseChronic InflammationImmune Cell InfiltrationCell BiologyModerate AgingCytokineCisplatin-induced Kidney InjuryUrologyCellular SenescenceMedicineRenal AgingNephrology
Aging is a risk factor for certain forms of kidney injury due to normal physiological changes, but the role of aging in cisplatin-induced kidney injury is not well defined in humans or animal models of the disease. To improve on current knowledge in this field, we treated 8- and 40-wk-old FVB/n mice with one high dose of cisplatin as a model of acute kidney injury or with repeated low doses of cisplatin (7 mg/kg cisplatin once a week for 4 wk) as a clinically relevant model of chronic kidney disease to determine if aging exacerbates cisplatin-induced kidney injury. Levels of acute kidney injury were comparable in 8- and 40-wk-old mice. In 40-wk-old mice, fibrotic markers were elevated basally, but treatment with cisplatin did not exacerbate fibrosis. We concluded that this may be the result of a decreased inflammatory response in 40-wk-old cisplatin-treated mice compared with 8-wk-old mice. Despite a decreased inflammatory response, the level of immune cell infiltration was greater in 40-wk-old cisplatin-treated mice than 8-wk-old mice. Our data highlight the importance of examining age as a risk factor for cisplatin-induced kidney injury.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1