Biomedicines (Mar 2022)

Oxidative Stress-Induced Alterations of Cellular Localization and Expression of Aquaporin 1 Lead to Defected Water Transport upon Peritoneal Fibrosis

  • Yu-Syuan Wei,
  • Hui-Ping Cheng,
  • Ching-Ho Wu,
  • Yen-Chen Chang,
  • Ruo-Wei Lin,
  • Yu-Ting Hsu,
  • Yi-Ting Chen,
  • Shuei-Liong Lin,
  • Su-Yi Tsai,
  • Shinn-Chih Wu,
  • Pei-Shiue Tsai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10040810
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
p. 810

Abstract

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Being one of the renal replacement therapies, peritoneal dialysis (PD) maintains around 15% of end-stage kidney disease patients’ lives; however, complications such as peritoneal fibrosis and ultrafiltration failure during long-term PD compromise its application. Previously, we established a sodium hypochlorite (NaClO)-induced peritoneal fibrosis porcine model, which helped to bridge the rodent model toward pre-clinical human peritoneal fibrosis research. In this study, the peritoneal equilibration test (PET) was established to evaluate instant functional changes in the peritoneum in the pig model. Similar to observations from long-term PD patients, increasing small solutes transport and loss of sodium sieving were observed. Mechanistic investigation from both in vivo and in vitro data suggested that disruption of cytoskeleton induced by excessive reactive oxygen species defected intracellular transport of aquaporin 1, this likely resulted in the disappearance of sodium sieving upon PET. Functional interference of aquaporin 1 on free water transport would result in PD failure in patients.

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