Ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury is an important cause of renal graft dysfunction in humans. Increases in cold and warm ischemia times lead to a higher risk of early post-transplant complications including delayed graft function and acute rejection. Moreover, prolonged cold ischemia is a predictor of long-term kidney graft loss. The protective effect of rabbit anti-rat thymocyte immunoglobulin (rATG) was evaluated in a rat model of I/R injury following syngeneic kidney transplantation. Serum creatinine concentration was evaluated at 16 h and 24 h post-transplant. Animals were sacrificed 24 h post-transplant for evaluation of histology, infiltrating leukocytes, nitrotyrosine staining, and apoptosis. rATG was effective in preventing renal function impairment, tissue damage and tubular apoptosis associated with I/R only when was given 2 h before transplantation but not at the time of reperfusion. Pretransplant rATG treatment of recipient animals effectively reduced the amount of macrophages, CD4 +, CD8 + T cells and LFA-1 + cells infiltrating renal graft subjected to cold ischemia as well as granzyme-B expression within ischemic kidney. On the other hand, granulocyte infiltration and oxidative stress were not modified by rATG. If these results will be translated into the clinical setting, pretransplant administration of Thymoglobuline® could offer the additional advantage over peri-transplant administration of limiting I/R-mediated kidney graft damage.

Rabbit anti-rat thymocyte immunoglobulin preserves renal function during ischemia/reperfusion injury in rat kidney transplantation / S. Aiello, P. Cassis, M. Mister, S. Solini, F. Rocchetta, M. Abbate, E. Gagliardini, A. Benigni, G. Remuzzi, M. Noris. - In: TRANSPLANT INTERNATIONAL. - ISSN 0934-0874. - 24:8(2011 Aug), pp. 829-838.

Rabbit anti-rat thymocyte immunoglobulin preserves renal function during ischemia/reperfusion injury in rat kidney transplantation

F. Rocchetta;G. Remuzzi
Penultimo
;
2011

Abstract

Ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury is an important cause of renal graft dysfunction in humans. Increases in cold and warm ischemia times lead to a higher risk of early post-transplant complications including delayed graft function and acute rejection. Moreover, prolonged cold ischemia is a predictor of long-term kidney graft loss. The protective effect of rabbit anti-rat thymocyte immunoglobulin (rATG) was evaluated in a rat model of I/R injury following syngeneic kidney transplantation. Serum creatinine concentration was evaluated at 16 h and 24 h post-transplant. Animals were sacrificed 24 h post-transplant for evaluation of histology, infiltrating leukocytes, nitrotyrosine staining, and apoptosis. rATG was effective in preventing renal function impairment, tissue damage and tubular apoptosis associated with I/R only when was given 2 h before transplantation but not at the time of reperfusion. Pretransplant rATG treatment of recipient animals effectively reduced the amount of macrophages, CD4 +, CD8 + T cells and LFA-1 + cells infiltrating renal graft subjected to cold ischemia as well as granzyme-B expression within ischemic kidney. On the other hand, granulocyte infiltration and oxidative stress were not modified by rATG. If these results will be translated into the clinical setting, pretransplant administration of Thymoglobuline® could offer the additional advantage over peri-transplant administration of limiting I/R-mediated kidney graft damage.
apoptosis; ischemia/reperfusion; kidney transplant; oxidative stress; Thymoglobuline
Settore MED/14 - Nefrologia
ago-2011
Article (author)
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Aiello_et_al-2011-Transplant_International.pdf

accesso riservato

Tipologia: Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione 652.59 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
652.59 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/332171
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 7
  • Scopus 17
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 17
social impact