학술논문

Xenon Treatment Protects Against Cold Ischemia Associated Delayed Graft Function and Prolongs Graft Survival in Rats
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Transplantation. 13(8)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Clinical Sciences
Kidney Disease
Transplantation
Organ Transplantation
Renal and urogenital
Anesthetics
Inhalation
Animals
Blotting
Western
Cells
Cultured
Cold Ischemia
Delayed Graft Function
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
Graft Survival
HMGB1 Protein
Humans
Hypothermia
Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1
alpha Subunit
Immunoenzyme Techniques
Kidney
Kidney Transplantation
NF-kappa B
RNA
Small Interfering
Rats
Rats
Inbred F344
Rats
Inbred Lew
Reperfusion Injury
Transplantation
Homologous
Xenon
Delayed graft function
graft survival
renal graft loss
treatment
Medical and Health Sciences
Surgery
Clinical sciences
Immunology
Language
Abstract
Prolonged hypothermic storage causes ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) in the renal graft, which is considered to contribute to the occurrence of the delayed graft function (DGF) and chronic graft failure. Strategies are required to protect the graft and to prolong renal graft survival. We demonstrated that xenon exposure to human proximal tubular cells (HK-2) led to activation of range of protective proteins. Xenon treatment prior to or after hypothermia-hypoxia challenge stabilized the HK-2 cellular structure, diminished cytoplasmic translocation of high-mobility group box (HMGB) 1 and suppressed NF-κB activation. In the syngeneic Lewis-to-Lewis rat model of kidney transplantation, xenon exposure to donors before graft retrieval or to recipients after engraftment decreased caspase-3 expression, localized HMGB-1 within nuclei and prevented TLR-4/NF-κB activation in tubular cells; serum pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF-α were reduced and renal function was preserved. Xenon treatment of graft donors or of recipients prolonged renal graft survival following IRI in both Lewis-to-Lewis isografts and Fischer-to-Lewis allografts. Xenon induced cell survival or graft functional recovery was abolished by HIF-1α siRNA. Our data suggest that xenon treatment attenuates DGF and enhances graft survival. This approach could be translated into clinical practice leading to a considerable improvement in long-term graft survival.