Dept. of Physiology and Biophysics, Dept. of Medicine, Univ. of Mississippi Medical Center, 2500 N. State St., Jackson, MS 39216-4505, USA.
Am J Physiol Renal Physiol. 2012 May 15;302(10):F1342-50. doi: 10.1152/ajprenal.00674.2011. Epub 2012 Feb 22.
Renal microvascular (MV) damage and loss contribute to the progression of renal injury in renovascular disease (RVD). Whether a targeted intervention in renal microcirculation could reverse renal damage is unknown. We hypothesized that intrarenal vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) therapy will reverse renal dysfunction and decrease renal injury in experimental RVD. Unilateral renal artery stenosis (RAS) was induced in 14 pigs, as a surrogate of chronic RVD. Six weeks later, renal blood flow (RBF) and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were quantified in vivo in the stenotic kidney using multidetector computed tomography (CT). Then, intrarenal rhVEGF-165 or vehicle was randomly administered into the stenotic kidneys (n = 7/group), they were observed for 4 additional wk, in vivo studies were repeated, and then renal MV density was quantified by 3D micro-CT, and expression of angiogenic factors and fibrosis was determined. RBF and GFR, MV density, and renal expression of VEGF and downstream mediators such as p-ERK 1/2, Akt, and eNOS were significantly reduced after 6 and at 10 wk of untreated RAS compared with normal controls. Remarkably, administration of VEGF at 6 wk normalized RBF (from 393.6 ± 50.3 to 607.0 ± 45.33 ml/min, P < 0.05 vs. RAS) and GFR (from 43.4 ± 3.4 to 66.6 ± 10.3 ml/min, P < 0.05 vs. RAS) at 10 wk, accompanied by increased angiogenic signaling, augmented renal MV density, and attenuated renal scarring. This study shows promising therapeutic effects of a targeted renal intervention, using an established clinically relevant large-animal model of chronic RAS. It also implies that disruption of renal MV integrity and function plays a pivotal role in the progression of renal injury in the stenotic kidney. Furthermore, it shows a high level of plasticity of renal microvessels to a single-dose VEGF-targeted intervention after established renal injury, supporting promising renoprotective effects of a novel potential therapeutic intervention to treat chronic RVD.
肾微血管(MV)损伤和丢失导致肾血管疾病(RVD)中的肾损伤进展。针对肾微循环的靶向干预是否可以逆转肾损伤尚不清楚。我们假设,肾内血管内皮生长因子(VEGF)治疗将逆转肾功能障碍并减少实验性 RVD 中的肾脏损伤。在 14 头猪中诱导单侧肾动脉狭窄(RAS),作为慢性 RVD 的替代物。6 周后,使用多探测器计算机断层扫描(CT)在狭窄肾脏中体内定量评估肾血流量(RBF)和肾小球滤过率(GFR)。然后,将肾内 rhVEGF-165 或载体随机注入狭窄肾脏(n = 7/组),再观察 4 周,重复体内研究,然后通过 3D 微 CT 定量肾 MV 密度,并确定血管生成因子和纤维化的表达。与正常对照组相比,未经治疗的 RAS 6 和 10 周后,RBF 和 GFR、MV 密度以及肾内 VEGF 及其下游介质如 p-ERK 1/2、Akt 和 eNOS 的表达均显著降低。值得注意的是,在 6 周时给予 VEGF 可使 RBF(从 393.6 ± 50.3 至 607.0 ± 45.33 ml/min,P < 0.05 与 RAS 相比)和 GFR(从 43.4 ± 3.4 至 66.6 ± 10.3 ml/min,P < 0.05 与 RAS 相比)在 10 周时恢复正常,同时伴有血管生成信号增强、肾 MV 密度增加和肾瘢痕减轻。这项研究在慢性 RAS 的已建立的临床相关大动物模型中显示出针对肾脏的靶向干预的有希望的治疗效果。这也表明,肾 MV 完整性和功能的破坏在狭窄肾脏中肾脏损伤的进展中起关键作用。此外,它表明,在建立肾损伤后,单次剂量的 VEGF 靶向干预对肾微血管具有很高的可塑性,支持对慢性 RVD 进行新型潜在治疗干预的有希望的肾保护作用。