Ischemic preconditioning produces systemic protective and adoptively transferable effects

Ischemic preconditioning directly protects organs from subsequent non-specific injuries. To test for systemic protective effects kidneys from F-344 donor rats went through a short warm ischemic time. Both, clamped and contralateral unclamped kidneys were procured after either a short (15 min) or long (24 h) reperfusion period and transplanted into Lewis rats following a prolonged cold ischemia. To test for transferable effects serum from preconditioned rats was infused either into native donors or recipients. Following a short reperfusion interval protective effects were only evident in previously clamped grafts. However, after a long reperfusion interval protective effects were observed in previously clamped and contralateral unclamped kidneys promoting improved survival, structure, function and reduced inflammation. These effects were not related to heme oxygenase-1 induction or neural transmission as heme oxygenase-1 inhibition or denervation prior to preconditioning did not affect organ protection. These results show that renal ischemic preconditioning is associated with time-dependent local and systemically transferable protection.

Additional Info

  • Language:
    English
  • Contains Audio:
    No
  • Content Type:
    Articles
  • Source:
    KI
  • Year:
    2014
  • Members Only:
    No



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Last modified on Friday, 28 March 2014 14:32

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