Sanjeev KumarD. A. AllenJulius KieswichNimesh S. A. PatelSteven HarwoodEmanuela MazzonSalvatore CuzzocreaMartin RafteryChristoph ThiemermannMuhammad M. Yaqoob
In the setting of renal ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI), the effect and mechanism of action of glucocorticoids are not well understood. In rat renal IRI, a single dose of dexamethasone administered before ischemia, or at the onset of reperfusion, ameliorated biochemical and histologic acute kidney injury after 24 h. Dexamethasone upregulated Bcl-xL, downregulated ischemia-induced Bax, inhibited caspase-9 and caspase-3 activation, and reduced apoptosis and necrosis of proximal tubular cells. In addition, dexamethasone decreased the number of infiltrating neutrophils and ICAM-1. We observed the protective effect of dexamethasone in neutrophil-depleted mice, suggesting a neutrophil-independent mechanism. In vitro, dexamethasone protected human kidney proximal tubular (HK-2) cells during serum starvation and IRI-induced apoptosis, but inhibition of MEK 1/2 abolished its anti-apoptotic effects in these conditions. Dexamethasone stimulated rapid and transient phosphorylation of ERK 1/2, which required the presence of the glucocorticoid receptor and was independent of transcriptional activity. In summary, in the setting of renal ischemia-reperfusion injury, dexamethasone directly protects against kidney injury by a receptor-dependent, nongenomic mechanism.
Sergio Rodrı́guez-ReynosoCaridad LealEliseo Portilla‐de BuenJuan Carlos CastilloFrancisco Ramos-Solano
Yi ZhengMin LüLulin MaShudong ZhangMin QiuYunpeng Wang
Turun SongMianzhi ChenZhengsheng RaoYang QiuJinpeng LiuYamei JiangZhongli HuangXianding WangTao Lin
Joseph P. GrandeJingfei ChengPing Yin
Amr A. FouadAbdulruhman S. Al-MulhimIyad Jresat