Summary

ラット腎臓への生物製剤の血管内デリバリー

Published: September 01, 2016
doi:

Summary

腎機能の回復のための薬剤の投与は、治療化合物の局在化および分布の制御を必要とします。ここでは、具体的にラットにおける薬物の腎内送達のための簡単​​な方法を説明します。この手順は容易に死亡し、再現性良く行うことができます。

Abstract

The renal microvascular compartment plays an important role in the progression of kidney disease and hypertension, leading to the development of End Stage Renal Disease with high risk of death for cardiovascular events. Moreover, recent clinical studies have shown that renovascular structure and function may have a great impact on functional renal recovery after surgery. Here, we describe a protocol for the delivery of drugs into the renal artery of rats. This procedure offers significant advantages over the frequently used systemic administration as it may allow a more localized therapeutic effect. In addition, the use of rodents in pharmacodynamic analysis of preclinical studies may be cost effective, paving the way for the design of translational experiments in larger animal models. Using this technique, infusion of rat recombinant Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) protein in rats has induced activation of VEGF signaling as shown by increased expression of FLK1, pAKT/AKT, pERK/ERK. In summary, we established a protocol for the intrarenal delivery of drugs in rats, which is simple and highly reproducible.

Introduction

The renal microvasculature is involved in a wide spectrum of kidney diseases. Depending on the pathophysiology of disease, the endothelial cells may present structural or functional impairment, which may play a pivotal role in propagating kidney damage by creating an ischemic microenvironment. This renal microvascular dysfunction may catalyze the onset of a progressive deterioration of renal function over time, leading to chronic kidney disease (CKD), end-stage renal disease, hypertension and cardiorenal syndrome. In fact, untreated hypertension may have implications in renal arterioles, causing nephrosclerosis or glomerulosclerosis with significant reduction in vascular volume fraction, increase in vascular resistance and development of tubulointerstitial fibrosis1.

Loss of renal microvasculature may be due to altered vascular homeostasis induced by local angiogenic/anti-angiogenic factors imbalance. This correlates with attenuated Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) signaling as well as elevated thrombospondin-12-4. Thus, using different animal models (mice, rats and pigs), the therapeutic effect of exogenous administration of VEGF has been recently investigated in some forms of renal disease, showing reduced interstitial fibrosis and stabilized renal and cardiac function3-5. This effect is likely due to actions of VEGF on endothelial cells of the microvascular bed and inflammatory monocyte phenotype switching6.

For some preclinical studies, the use of rodents, the most commonly used laboratory animals, provides a good animal model for high throughput studies due to relatively low costs and ease of handling. Moreover, the use of genetically-altered rats as models of human diseases, such as hypertension, has become more and more frequent in the scientific community. Therefore, the aim of this protocol is to describe a useful intrarenal VEGF delivery technique in rats that is easy to perform and highly reproducible. Moreover, the same method can be used to selectively deliver other drugs.

Protocol

実験は250〜300グラムの重量を量る、雌性Sprague-Dawleyラットで実施しました。実験動物の管理と使用に関するガイドに記載された基準に準拠し、すべての動物の手順は、(実験動物資源、全米科学アカデミーの研究所、ベセスダ、MD、USA)とは、医療施設内動物管理のメイヨークリニックの大学によって承認されました使用委員会(IACUC)。 1.準備手術前に、すべての手術器具をオ?…

Representative Results

我々は、組換えラットVEGF(rrVEGF、0.17μgの/キログラムおよび5μg/ kg)またはPBSの二つの異なる投与量を注入しました。動物は、VEGF経路の活性化を調べるために、8時間後に手術を安楽死させました。 H&E染色によって示されるように、制御( 図1B)と比較した場合、外科的処置は、灌流腎臓( 図1A)の形態に影響を及ぼしませんでした。?…

Discussion

The increasing incidence of chronic kidney disease raises the need for novel therapeutic approaches that can promote functional kidney recovery7,8. Traditional therapies include the systemic administration of anti-inflammatory, anti-fibrotic drugs9. However, these strategies are frequently characterized by unwanted side effects due to off-target distribution of the injected drug. Therefore, in this manuscript, we describe a simple procedure for delivering drugs into the renal artery of rats. This pr…

Divulgazioni

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Materials

Surgical Microscope Leica M125
Isoflurane 100 ml Cardinal Healthcare PI23238 Anesthetic
Buprenorphine HCL SR LAB 1mg/ml, 5 ml ZooPharm Pharmacy Buprenorphine narcotic analgesic formulated in a polymer that slows absorption extending duration of action (72 hours duration of activity).                                                        Liquid is viscous, warming to room temperature aids in drawing into syringe.                                                           Recommended dosage: 1-1.2 mg/kg SC. DO NOT DILUTE.
Puralube Vet Ophthalmic Ointment Dechra NDC17033-211-38 Sterile ocular lubricant
Lactated Ringer's Injection, USP, 250 mL VIAFLEX Plastic Container Baxter Healthcare Corp. NDC0338-0117-02 For body fluids replacement
Sol Povidone-Iodine  Swabstick, 3'  Cardinal Heatlhcare 23405-010B
Sterile cotton tipped applicators Kendall 8884541300
4-0 silk suture (without needle)  Cardinal Heatlhcare A183H
Vessel Clip, Straight, 0.75 x 4mm Jaw World Precision Instruments  501779-G
I.V. Catheter, Straight Hub, Radiopaque, 24g x 3/4", FEP Polymer Jelco 4053
Phosphate Buffered Saline Life Technologies 10010023
SURGIFOAM Absorbable Gelatin Sponge Cardinal Healthcare 179082
4-0 VICRYL PLUS (ANTIBACTERIAL) VIOLET 27" RB-1 TAPER Ethicon VCP304H For muscle layer suturing
4-0 VICRYL PLUS (ANTIBACTERIAL) UNDYED 18" PC-3 CUTTING Ethicon VCP845G For skin layer suturing
Triple antibiotic ointment Actavis NDC0472-0179-56 For topical use on the site of the incision
Recombinant Rat VEGF 164 Protein R&D Sytems 564-RV
Rabbit monoclonal VEGFA Abcam ab46154
Rabbit monoclonal FLK1 Cell Signaling 9698
Rabbit monoclonal AKT Cell Signaling 4691
Rabbit monoclonal phosphoAKT (Ser 473) Cell Signaling 4060
Rabbit monoclonal p44/42 MAPK (ERK1/2) Cell Signaling 4695
Rabbit monoclonal phospho p44/42 MAPK (Thr202 and Tyr 204) Cell Signaling 4370

Riferimenti

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Citazione di questo articolo
Franchi, F., Zhu, X. Y., Witt, T. A., Lerman, L. O., Rodriguez-Porcel, M. Intravascular Delivery of Biologics to the Rat Kidney. J. Vis. Exp. (115), e54418, doi:10.3791/54418 (2016).

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