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Browsing by Subject "Stress proteins"

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    Mercuric chloride-induced alterations in stress protein distribution in rat kidney
    (Murcia : F. Hernández, 2004) Stacchiotti, A.; Lavazza, A.; Rezzani, R.; Borsani, E.; Rodella, L.F.; Bianchi, R.
    Mercuric chloride (HgCl2) induces acute renal failure associated to tubular impairment in experimental animals and humans. Stress proteins are a superfamily of proteins, comprising heat- shock proteins (HSP) and glucose-regulated proteins (GRP), enhanced or induced in the kidney in response to stress. They act as molecular chaperones that protect organelles and repair essential proteins which have been denatured during adverse conditions. The involvement of stress proteins in mercury-nephrotoxicity has not yet been well clarified. This study was undertaken to detect the tubular distribution of four stress proteins (HSP25, HSP60, GRP75, HSP72) in the rat kidney injected with HgCl2 and to quantify lysosomal and mitochondrial changes in straight proximal tubules, the main mercury target. Sprague-Dawley rats were administered i.p. with progressive sublethal doses of HgCl2 (0.25 mg/kg, 0.5 mg/kg, 1 mg/kg and 3.5 mg/kg) or saline (as controls) and sacrificed after 24 h. In dosages over 0.50 mg/kg, stress proteins increased and changed localization in a dose-dependent manner. HSP25 was focally expressed in altered proximal tubules at 1 mg/kg but in the macula densa it was at 3.5 mg/kg. HSP60 and GRP75 were intense in the nucleus and cytoplasm of proximal tubules but moderate in distal tubules. HSP72 was induced in distal tubules after low exposures but in proximal tubules it happened at the highest dose. Moreover, a significant increase in lysosomal and total mitochondria (normal and with broken cristae) area and density were progressively found after HgCl2 treatments. Stress proteins could represent sensitive biomarkers that strongly correlate with the degree of oxidative injury induced by HgCl2 in the rat proximal tubules.
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    Relationship between plasma biochemistry values and metal concentrations in nesting olive ridley sea turtles
    (Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature, 2018-10-30) Cortés-Gómez, Adriana A.; Tvarijonaviciute, Asta; Girondot, Marc; Tecles, Fernando; Romero, Diego; Ciencias Sociosanitarias
    A hundred nesting olive ridley turtles were sampled to determine biochemical parameters (ALP, AST, ALT, creatinine, albumin, cholesterol, glucose, proteins, triglycerides, urea, and P-nitrophenyl acetate esterase activity). Esterase activity (EA) is a new biomarker very sensitive to metals. Most of the samples showed detectable levels. We also analyzed the concentration of 11 inorganic elements (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Mn, Ni, Pb, Sr, Ti, Se, and Zn), some of them previously reported with very high concentrations in this population (especially cadmium with 82 and 150 μgg−1 ww in liver and kidney, respectively). Cadmium presented two negative relationships with creatinine and glucose. Some other understudied elements, Sr and Ti, for instance, presented five and four significant relationships with some biochemical parameters, respectively (most of them positive). EA was the parameter with most negative relationships (with Pb, Ti, As, Cr, and Se), reinforcing the results of other researchers in humans regarding the possible inhibition of EA by metals.

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