Effects of hypoxia on growth factor expression in the rat kidney in vivo.
Клучни зборови
Апстракт
There is accumulating evidence from in vitro studies suggesting that the genes of endothelin-1, PDGF, and VEGF are, like the erythropoietin gene, regulated by oxygen tension and by divalent cations. Hypoxia-induced stimulation of, such as endothelin-1, PDGF or VEGF might be involved in the pathogenesis of acute or chronic renal failure, and in renal "inflammatory" diseases (glomerulonephritis, vasculitis, allograft rejection). Hypoxia (8% O2) for six hours caused a 55-fold/1.6-fold increase of renal erythropoietin/endothelin-1 gene expression, whereas endothelin-3, PDGF-A, PDGF-B, and VEGF gene expression was unchanged. Carbon monoxide (0.1%) treatment for six hours stimulated renal erythropoietin gene expression 140-fold; however, endothelin-1, endothelin-3, PDGF-A, PDGF-B, and VEGF gene expression was not affected. Finally, cobalt treatment (60 mg/kg CoCl2) increased only renal erythropoietin/PDGF-B gene expression 5-fold/1.65-fold. These findings suggest that hypoxia is a rather weak stimulus for renal endothelin-1 gene expression, and that renal PDGF and VEGF gene expression in vivo is not sensitive to tissue hypoxia, in contrast to cell culture experiments. The in vivo regulation of endothelin-1, PDGF, and VEGF differs substantially from that of erythropoietin, suggesting that the basic gene regulatory mechanisms may not be the same.