Primary hyperoxaluria type 1 (PH1) is a rare life-threatening genetic disease related to glyoxylate metabolism and characterized by accumulation of calcium oxalate crystals. Current therapies involve hepatic and/or renal transplantation, procedures that have significant morbidity and mortality and require long-term immunosuppression. Thus, a pharmacological treatment is urgently needed. We introduce here an unprecedented activity of salicylic acid derivatives as agents capable of decreasing oxalate output in hyperoxaluric hepatocytes at the low micromolar range, which means a potential use in the treatment of PH1. Though correlation of this phenotypic activity with glycolate oxidase (GO) inhibition is still to be verified, most of the salicylic acids described here are GO inhibitors with IC values down to 3 μM. Binding mode of salicylic acids inside GO has been studied using in silico methods, and preliminary structure-activity relationships have been established. The drug-like structure and ease of synthesis of our compounds make them promising hits for structural optimization.
The aim of this study was to evaluate differences in short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and the total fatty acid profile of faeces or plasma as possible indicators of FRE in comparison with healthy dogs. FRE dogs had a lower concentration (p = 0.026) of plasma α-tocopherol as an indicator of the oxidative status of the animal, and lower C20:5n-3 (p = 0.033), C22:5n-3 (p = 0.005), polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) (p = 0.021) and n-6 (p = 0.041) when compared with the control dogs; furthermore, sick dogs had higher proportions of plasma C20:3n-6 (p = 0.0056). The dogs with FRE showed a decrease in the production of faecal levels of SCFAs, mainly propionic acid (C3) (p = 0.0001) and isovaleric acid (iC5) (p = 0.014). FRE dogs also had a lower proportion of C15:0 (p = 0.0003), C16:1n-9 (p = 0.0095), C16:1n-7 (p = 0.0001), C20:5n-3 (p = 0.0034) and monounsaturated fatty acids (p = 0.0315), and tended to have lower n-3 (p = 0.058) and a reduced desaturase activity index in the stool when compared with the control group. However, the dogs with chronic enteropathy tended to have greater C20:4n-6 (p = 0.065) in their faeces as signs of damage at the intestinal level. The faecal parameters were better predictors than plasma. The highest correlations between faecal odd-chain, medium- or long-chain fatty acids and SCFAs were observed for C15:0 that correlated positively with faecal acetic acid (C2) (r = 0.72, p = 0.004), propionic acid (r = 0.95, p = 0.0001), isobutyric acid (iC4) (r = 0.59, p = 0.027) and isovaleric acid (r = 0.64, p = 0.0136), as well as with total SCFAs (r = 0.61, p = 0.02). Conversely, faecal C20:4n-6 showed a high inverse correlation (r = −0.83, p = 0.0002) with C2 and C3 (r = −0.59, p = 0.027). Canine inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) activity (CIBDAI) index correlated negatively mainly with faecal measurements, such as C3 (r = −0.869, p = 0.0005) and C15:0 (r = −0.825, p = 0.0018), followed by C16:1/C16:0 (r = −0.66, p= 0.0374) and iC5 (r = −0.648, p = 0.0310), which would indicate that these fatty acids could be good non-invasive indicators of the chronic inflammatory status, specifically FRE.
Dogs suffering from food-responsive enteropathy (FRE) respond to an elimination diet based on hydrolysed protein or novel protein; however, studies regarding the amino acid profile in FRE dogs are lacking. The aim of this pilot study was to evaluate whether the plasma and faecal amino acid profiles differed between control and FRE dogs and whether these could serve as indicators of severity of illness. Blood, faecal samples, body condition score, and severity of clinical signs based on the canine inflammatory bowel disease activity index were collected before starting the elimination diet. FRE dogs had lower proportions of plasma Asparagine, Histidine, Glycine, Cystine, Leucine, and branched-chain/aromatic amino acids; however, Phenylalanine increased. In faecal samples, Cystine was greater whereas Phenylalanine was lesser in sick dogs compared to control. Leucine correlated negatively with faecal humidity (r = −0.66), and Leucine and Phenylalanine with faecal fat (r = −0.57 and r = −0.62, respectively). Faecal Phenylalanine (r = 0.80), Isoleucine (r = 0.75), and Leucine (r = 0.92) also correlated positively with total short-chain fatty acids, whereas a negative correlation was found with Glycine (r = −0.85) and Cystine (r = −0.61). This study demonstrates the importance of Leucine and Phenylalanine amino acids as indicators of the disease severity in FRE dogs.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Patients with primary hyperoxaluria type I (PH I) are prone to develop early end-stage kidney failure (ESKF). Systemic deposition of calcium-oxalate (CaOx) crystals starts when renal function declines and plasma oxalate (Pox) increases >30 µmol/L. It is anticipated that all parenchymal organs, but also bone (marrow), retina and the central nervous system can be involved. However, liver involvement, either as CaOx deposition or as chronic hepatitis/fibrosis, was never reported. METHOD We now examined liver involvement in 19 patients with PH I aged 1.5–52 years. Liver specimen was obtained by biopsy for diagnostic purposes (1), at autopsy (1) or at the time of combined or sequential liver kidney transplantation (17). RESULTS With polarization microscopy, crystals with the typical star-like appearance of CaOx were found in 3/19 patients. The crystals were located in small arteries but not within hepatocytes. Cirrhosis was seen in one patient. Fibrosis was seen in 10/19 patients, with porto-portal and nodular fibrosis (n = 1), and a limitation of fibrosis to the portal field in eight and/or to central areas in five patients. Unspecific hepatitis features were observed in seven patients. Fiber proliferations were detectable in 10 cases, and in one sample, transformed Ito-cells (myofibroblasts) were found. Iron deposition but also megakaryocytes as a sign of extramedullary erythropoiesis were found in nine and three patients, respectively. CONCLUSION Overall, liver involvement in patients with PH I was more pronounced, as previously described. However, compared with CaOx deposition in other organs/tissue, such crystal accumulations were only minimal in the liver, although the oxalate concentration must be the highest.
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