These data suggest that targeting the urokinase-type plasminogen activator and its receptor system by systemic UPARANT is a potential therapeutic approach for the treatment of early diabetic retinopathy, thus providing a potential alternative approach to delay disease progression in humans.
In patients with chronic renal failure, not yet undergoing hemodialysis (HD), plasma acylcarnitines accumulate in part due to a decreased renal clearance of esterified carnitine moieties. In these patients, a high acylcarnitine/free-carnitine ratio is usually found in plasma. Patients undergoing maintenance HD, usually present with plasma carnitine insufficiency, due to accumulation of metabolic intermediates combined with impaired carnitine biosynthesis, reduced protein intake and increased removal via HD. Plasma carnitine concentrations rapidly decrease to 40% of baseline level during the dialysis session, with a slow restoration of the carnitine concentration during the interdialytic period, mainly from organs of storage (skeletal muscle). Dietary intake also plays an important role in carnitine homeostasis of HD patients since the prevalence of malnutrition ranges from 18% to 75% of these cases. This could differentially affect various body compartments, with clinical consequences such as impaired muscle function, decreased wound healing, altered ventilatory response, and abnormal immune function. Repeated hemodialytic treatments are associated with decreased carnitine stores in skeletal muscle. The administration of intravenous L-carnitine (LC) postdialysis replenishes the free carnitine removed from the blood and contributes to replenishment of muscle carnitine content. LC supplementation in selected uremic patients may yield clinical benefits by ameliorating several conditions, such as erythropoietin-resistant anemia, decreased cardiac performance, intradialytic hypotension, muscle symptoms, as well as impaired exercise and functional capacities. Furthermore, LC may positively influence the nutritional status of HD patients by promoting a positive protein balance, and by reducing insulin resistance and chronic inflammation, possibly through an effect on leptin resistance.
Hepatic uptake of propionyl-L-carnitine (PLC) and L-carnitine (LC) was assessed with the impulse-response technique in the single-pass perfused rat liver. The experiments involved a rapid injection (impulse) of a mixture of the radiolabeled test compound (PLC or LC) and a reference compound (sucrose) into portal vein inflow and collection and radiochemical analysis (response) of the venous outflowing perfusate samples. The impulse injection was made in the presence of increasing unlabeled background concentrations of PLC (0 -50 M) or LC (50 -500 M) perfusing the liver. The hepatic uptake was minimal or negligible for LC, whereas the hepatic influx clearance was found to be low (0.095 ml/s equivalent to 5.7 ml/min) for PLC relative to the perfusate flow rate (30 ml/min). When background concentrations of PLC were increased (from 1-50 M), the influx clearance was reduced in a concentration-dependent behavior, indicating partial saturation of the entry of compound into hepatocytes. PLC was taken up into hepatocytes via a unidirectional transport process with negligible efflux. The hepatic uptake of PLC was significantly reduced in the presence of unlabeled LC (500 M), indicating an inhibition of the sinusoidal membrane transport of PLC by LC. The study showed the sinusoidal membrane is a permeability barrier to the entry of PLC and LC into hepatocytes, and it is the site of a common carrier-mediated transporter for both compounds.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.