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Pharmacological inhibitors of autophagy have opposite effects in acute and chronic cisplatin-induced kidney injury

Authors :
Sophia M. Sears
Joanna L. Feng
Andrew Orwick
Alexis A. Vega
Austin M. Krueger
Parag P. Shah
Mark A. Doll
Levi J. Beverly
Leah J. Siskind
Source :
American journal of physiology. Renal physiology. 323(3)
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The nephrotoxicity of cisplatin remains a major hurdle in the field of oncology. Thirty percent of patients treated with cisplatin develop acute kidney injury, and all patients are at risk for long-term impacts on kidney function. There are currently no Federal Drug Administration-approved agents to prevent or treat cisplatin-induced kidney injury. The dosing regimen used in preclinical models of nephrotoxicity may impact the success of therapeutic candidates in clinical trials. Here, we demonstrated that pharmacological inhibitors of autophagy have opposite effects when used as interventions in two different models of cisplatin-induced kidney injury. Eight-week-old male C57BL/6 mice were treated with either one dose of 20 mg/kg cisplatin or weekly doses of 9 mg/kg cisplatin for 4 wk or until body weight loss exceeded 30%. Concurrently, mice were administered multiple doses of 60 mg/kg chloroquine or 15 mg/kg 3-methyladenine attempting to globally inhibit autophagy. Mice that received a single high dose of cisplatin had worsened kidney function, inflammation, and cell death with the addition of chloroquine. 3-Methlyadenine did not impact the development of acute kidney injury in this model. In contrast, mice that received repeated low doses of cisplatin showed improved kidney function, reduced inflammation, and reduced fibrosis when treated with either chloroquine or 3-methyladenine. This study highlights how therapeutic candidates can have drastically different effects on the development of cisplatin-induced kidney injury depending on the dosing model used. This emphasizes the importance of choosing the appropriate model of injury for preclinical studies.

Details

ISSN :
15221466
Volume :
323
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of physiology. Renal physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7cfa7daf1f86c42d0ddc239d0dca6b88