Background/Aims: Catecholamines prevent hypothermic cell death which accounts for severe tissue damage and impaired allograft function after prolonged organ preservation. Here, we identified cellular processes which govern hypothermia-mediated cell death in endothelial cells and how they are influenced by dopamine. Methods: Lactate dehydrogenase assay, intracellular ATP, reactive oxygen species and reduced thio-group measurement, intracellular calcium measurement and mitochondrial calcium staining were performed in the study. Results: Intracellular ATP was almost completely depleted within 12 hrs of hypothermic preservation in untreated human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC), while dopamine pre-treatment significantly delayed ATP depletion. 4 hrs after hypothermia a redox imbalance was observed in untreated cells, which increased with the duration of hypothermia. The redox imbalance was primarily caused by depletion of SH reduction equivalents and was significantly inhibited by dopamine. In addition, hypothermia-induced Ca2+ influx and mitochondrial Ca2+ accumulation were both prevented by dopamine. The protective effect of dopamine was abrogated by ionomycin and sodium azide and partly by oligomycin and CCCP. Conclusions: Our data demonstrated that loss of intracellular ATP, generation of a redox imbalance and accumulation of intracellular Ca2+ underlie cold preservation injury. Dopamine improves the redox balance, prevents intracellular Ca2+ accumulation and delays ATP depletion.
Podocytes are terminally differentiated cells of the kidney filtration barrier. They are subjected to physiological filtration pressure and considerable mechanical strain, which can be further increased in various kidney diseases. When injury causes cytoskeletal reorganization and morphological alterations of these cells, the filtration barrier may become compromised and allow proteins to leak into the urine (a condition called proteinuria). Using time-resolved proteomics, we showed that podocyte injury stimulated the activity of the transcriptional coactivator YAP and the expression of YAP target genes in a rat model of glomerular disease before the development of proteinuria. Although the activities of YAP and its ortholog TAZ are activated by mechanical stress in most cell types, injury reduced YAP and TAZ activity in cultured human and mouse podocyte cell lines grown on stiff substrates. Culturing these cells on soft matrix or inhibiting stress fiber formation recapitulated the damage-induced YAP up-regulation observed in vivo, indicating a mechanotransduction-dependent mechanism of YAP activation in podocytes. YAP overexpression in cultured podocytes increased the abundance of extracellular matrix-related proteins that can contribute to fibrosis. YAP activity was increased in mouse models of diabetic nephropathy, and the YAP target was highly expressed in renal biopsies from glomerular disease patients. Although overexpression of human YAP in mice induced mild proteinuria, pharmacological inhibition of the interaction between YAP and its partner TEAD in rats ameliorated glomerular disease and reduced damage-induced mechanosignaling in the glomeruli. Thus, perturbation of YAP-dependent mechanosignaling is a potential therapeutic target for treating some glomerular diseases.
Our study demonstrates beneficial effects of dopamine treatment on cold storage induced endothelial barrier disturbances. This may contribute to the positive effects of catecholamines on immediate graft function of renal allografts in men.
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