Cargando…

Revealing a Pre-neoplastic Renal Tubular Lesion by p-S6 Protein Immunohistochemistry after Rat Exposure to Aristolochic Acid

Aristolochic acid (AA) has, in the last decade, become widely promoted as the cause of the Balkan endemic nephropathy and associated renal or urothelial tumours, although without substantial focal evidence of the quantitative dietary exposure via bread in specific households in hyperendemic villages...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gruia, Alexandra, Gazinska, Patrycja, Herman, Diana, Ordodi, Valentin, Tatu, Calin, Mantle, Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Codon Publications 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5345518/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28326270
http://dx.doi.org/10.15586/jkcvhl.2015.38
_version_ 1782513737958162432
author Gruia, Alexandra
Gazinska, Patrycja
Herman, Diana
Ordodi, Valentin
Tatu, Calin
Mantle, Peter
author_facet Gruia, Alexandra
Gazinska, Patrycja
Herman, Diana
Ordodi, Valentin
Tatu, Calin
Mantle, Peter
author_sort Gruia, Alexandra
collection PubMed
description Aristolochic acid (AA) has, in the last decade, become widely promoted as the cause of the Balkan endemic nephropathy and associated renal or urothelial tumours, although without substantial focal evidence of the quantitative dietary exposure via bread in specific households in hyperendemic villages. Occasional ethnobotanical use of Aristolochia clematitis might be a source of AA, and Pliocene lignite contamination of well-water is also a putative health risk factor. The aim of this study was two-fold: to verify if extracts of A. clematitis and Pliocene, or AA by itself, could induce the development of renal or urothelial tumours, and to test the utility of the ribosomal protein p-S6 to identify preneoplastic transformation. Rats were given extracts of A. clematitis in drinking water or AA I, by gavage. After seven months, renal morphology was studied using conventional haematoxylin and eosin and immunohistochemistry for ribosomal p-S6 protein. Plant extracts (cumulative AA approximately 1.8 g/kg b.w.) were tolerated and caused no gross pathology or renal histopathological change, with only faint diffuse p-S6 protein (except in the papilla) as in controls. Cumulative AA I (150 mg/kg b.w. given over 3 days) was also tolerated for seven months by all recipients, without gross pathology or kidney tumours. However, p-S6 protein over-expression was consistent particularly within the renal papilla. In one case given AA I, intense p-S6 protein staining of a proximal tubule fragment crucially matched the pre-neoplastic histology in an adjacent kidney section. We briefly discuss these findings, which compound uncertainty concerning the cause of the renal or upper urinary tract tumours of the Balkan endemic nephropathy.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5345518
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Codon Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-53455182017-03-21 Revealing a Pre-neoplastic Renal Tubular Lesion by p-S6 Protein Immunohistochemistry after Rat Exposure to Aristolochic Acid Gruia, Alexandra Gazinska, Patrycja Herman, Diana Ordodi, Valentin Tatu, Calin Mantle, Peter J Kidney Cancer VHL Original Article Aristolochic acid (AA) has, in the last decade, become widely promoted as the cause of the Balkan endemic nephropathy and associated renal or urothelial tumours, although without substantial focal evidence of the quantitative dietary exposure via bread in specific households in hyperendemic villages. Occasional ethnobotanical use of Aristolochia clematitis might be a source of AA, and Pliocene lignite contamination of well-water is also a putative health risk factor. The aim of this study was two-fold: to verify if extracts of A. clematitis and Pliocene, or AA by itself, could induce the development of renal or urothelial tumours, and to test the utility of the ribosomal protein p-S6 to identify preneoplastic transformation. Rats were given extracts of A. clematitis in drinking water or AA I, by gavage. After seven months, renal morphology was studied using conventional haematoxylin and eosin and immunohistochemistry for ribosomal p-S6 protein. Plant extracts (cumulative AA approximately 1.8 g/kg b.w.) were tolerated and caused no gross pathology or renal histopathological change, with only faint diffuse p-S6 protein (except in the papilla) as in controls. Cumulative AA I (150 mg/kg b.w. given over 3 days) was also tolerated for seven months by all recipients, without gross pathology or kidney tumours. However, p-S6 protein over-expression was consistent particularly within the renal papilla. In one case given AA I, intense p-S6 protein staining of a proximal tubule fragment crucially matched the pre-neoplastic histology in an adjacent kidney section. We briefly discuss these findings, which compound uncertainty concerning the cause of the renal or upper urinary tract tumours of the Balkan endemic nephropathy. Codon Publications 2015-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC5345518/ /pubmed/28326270 http://dx.doi.org/10.15586/jkcvhl.2015.38 Text en Copyright © 2016 Codon Publications License: This open access article is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
spellingShingle Original Article
Gruia, Alexandra
Gazinska, Patrycja
Herman, Diana
Ordodi, Valentin
Tatu, Calin
Mantle, Peter
Revealing a Pre-neoplastic Renal Tubular Lesion by p-S6 Protein Immunohistochemistry after Rat Exposure to Aristolochic Acid
title Revealing a Pre-neoplastic Renal Tubular Lesion by p-S6 Protein Immunohistochemistry after Rat Exposure to Aristolochic Acid
title_full Revealing a Pre-neoplastic Renal Tubular Lesion by p-S6 Protein Immunohistochemistry after Rat Exposure to Aristolochic Acid
title_fullStr Revealing a Pre-neoplastic Renal Tubular Lesion by p-S6 Protein Immunohistochemistry after Rat Exposure to Aristolochic Acid
title_full_unstemmed Revealing a Pre-neoplastic Renal Tubular Lesion by p-S6 Protein Immunohistochemistry after Rat Exposure to Aristolochic Acid
title_short Revealing a Pre-neoplastic Renal Tubular Lesion by p-S6 Protein Immunohistochemistry after Rat Exposure to Aristolochic Acid
title_sort revealing a pre-neoplastic renal tubular lesion by p-s6 protein immunohistochemistry after rat exposure to aristolochic acid
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5345518/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28326270
http://dx.doi.org/10.15586/jkcvhl.2015.38
work_keys_str_mv AT gruiaalexandra revealingapreneoplasticrenaltubularlesionbyps6proteinimmunohistochemistryafterratexposuretoaristolochicacid
AT gazinskapatrycja revealingapreneoplasticrenaltubularlesionbyps6proteinimmunohistochemistryafterratexposuretoaristolochicacid
AT hermandiana revealingapreneoplasticrenaltubularlesionbyps6proteinimmunohistochemistryafterratexposuretoaristolochicacid
AT ordodivalentin revealingapreneoplasticrenaltubularlesionbyps6proteinimmunohistochemistryafterratexposuretoaristolochicacid
AT tatucalin revealingapreneoplasticrenaltubularlesionbyps6proteinimmunohistochemistryafterratexposuretoaristolochicacid
AT mantlepeter revealingapreneoplasticrenaltubularlesionbyps6proteinimmunohistochemistryafterratexposuretoaristolochicacid