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Fenoldopam Preconditioning: Role of Heme Oxygenase-1 in Protecting Human Tubular Cells and Rodent Kidneys Against Cold-Hypoxic Injury

Abstract

Background

Kidneys from brain-dead donors are cold preserved until transplanted. However, prolonged cold storage can contribute to allograft failure. Studies suggest that donor preconditioning with dopaminergics may reduce cold-ischemic transplant injury, but whether heme oxygenase (HO)-1 induction is an underlying mechanism is not known.

Objective

To test whether preconditioning with fenoldopam (FD) induce HO-1 and protect kidneys against cold storage injury and whether HO-1 plays a role in protection.

Method

We used human renal proximal tubular epithelial cells, rat kidney transplants, and HO-1 null mice kidneys.

Results

FD preconditioning of cells for 4 hr significantly protected against cell death from 24-hr cold hypoxia and was associated with a dose-dependent increase in HO-1 expression. In a syngeneic rat kidney transplant model, FD preconditioning for 18 hr markedly increased kidney HO-1 expression and protected kidneys against 24-hr cold-ischemic transplant injury. To test the role of HO-1, renal proximal tubular epithelial cells were treated with HO-1 small interfering RNA, followed by FD-preconditioning. Small interfering RNA inhibited the HO-1 messenger RNA expression and reversed the FD protection. Suspension of kidneys of HO-1 null and wild-type mice preconditioned with FD or saline were subjected to 24- and 48-hr cold storage. N-acetyl glucosaminidase, a specific tubular injury marker, was significantly lower in FD-preconditioned wild-type kidneys, but not in HO-1 null kidneys, suggesting a role for HO-1 in FD's preconditioning.

Conclusion

Our data suggest HO-1 induction as an underlying mechanism for FD preconditioning and support the idea of testing FD preconditioning in the clinical setting. Studies are required to determine the optimum FD-preconditioning protocol.

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