Antithrombin nanoparticles improve kidney reperfusion and protect kidney function after ischemia-reperfusion injury

  • Junjie Chen
  • , Chandu Vemuri
  • , Rohun U. Palekar
  • , Joseph P. Gaut
  • , Matthew Goette
  • , Lingzhi Hu
  • , Grace Cui
  • , Huiying Zhang
  • , Samuel A. Wickline

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

35 Scopus citations

Abstract

In the extension phase of acute kidney injury, microvascular thrombosis, inflammation, vasoconstriction, and vascular endothelial cell dysfunction promote progressive damage to renal parenchyma after reperfusion. In this study, we hypothesized that direct targeting and pharmaceutical knockdown of activated thrombin at the sites of injury with a selective nanoparticle (NP)-based thrombin inhibitor, PPACK (phenylalanine-proline-arginine- chloromethylketone), would improve kidney reperfusion and protect renal function after transient warm ischemia in rodent models. Saline- or plain NP-treated animals were employed as controls. In vivo 19F magnetic resonance imaging revealed that kidney nonreperfusion was evident within 3 h after global kidney reperfusion at 34±13% area in the saline group and 43 ±12% area in the plain NP group and substantially reduced to 17±4% (~50% decrease, P<0.05) in the PPACK NP pretreatment group. PPACK NP pretreatment prevented an increase in serum creatinine concentration within 24 h after ischemia-reperfusion, reflecting preserved renal function. Histologic analysis illustrated substantially reduced intrarenal thrombin accumulation within 24 h after reperfusion for PPACK NP-treated kidneys (0.11%±0.06%) compared with saline-treated kidneys (0.58±0.37%).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)F765-F773
JournalAmerican Journal of Physiology - Renal Fluid and Electrolyte Physiology
Volume308
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 2015

Keywords

  • Acute kidney injury
  • Anticoagulation
  • MRI
  • Nanoparticles

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