Zinc supplementation partially prevents renal pathological changes in diabetic rats☆
Received 15 August 2008; received in revised form 28 November 2008; accepted 3 December 2008. published online 15 April 2009.
Abstract
We have demonstrated that Zn supplementation mediated up-regulation of cardiac metallothionein (MT) as a potent antioxidant prevented the development of diabetic cardiomyopathy. The present study was undertaken to test whether induction of renal MT synthesis by Zn supplementation protects the kidney from diabetes-induced damage. Streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats were treated with and without Zn supplementation at 5 mg/kg in drinking water for 3 months. Diabetic renal damage was detected by examining renal pathological alterations and 24-h urinary protein levels. Three-month Zn supplementation immediately after the onset of diabetes, partially but significantly, prevented the kidney from diabetes-induced increases in 24-h urinary proteins and pathological alterations. Diabetes-induced renal oxidative damage, inflammation and up-regulated expression of profibrosis mediator connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) were also markedly attenuated by Zn supplementation, along with significant increases in Zn levels concomitant with MT expression in renal tubular cells. Direct exposure of renal tubular (HK11) cells to high levels of glucose (HG) induced CTGF up-regulation predominantly through ERK (extracellular signal-regulated kinase)1/2-dependent, and partially through p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)-dependent pathways. Pretreatment of HK11 cells with Zn or cadmium induced MT expression and also significantly suppressed HG-induced CTGF expression. These results provide the first evidence for Zn supplementation to attenuate diabetes-induced renal pathological changes, likely through prevention of hyperglycemia-induced CTGF expression by Zn-induced MT in renal tubular cells.
aThe Chinese-American Research Institute for Diabetic Complications, The Wenzhou Medical College, Wenzhou, China
bDepartment of Pediatrics, The University of Louisville, Louisville, KY 40202, USA
cDepartment of Pathophysiology, Guiyang Medical College, Guiyang 55000, China
dThe China-Japan Union Hospital of Jilin University, Changchun, China
eDepartments of Radiation Oncology and Pharmacology and Toxicology, The University of Louisville, Louisville, KY 40202, USA
Corresponding authors. Qin Yang is to be contacted at Department of Pathophysiology, Guiyang Medical College, Guiyang, China. Lu Cai, at The Department of Pediatrics, University of Louisville, 570 S. Preston St, Baxter I Building, Suite 304F, Louisville, KY 40202, USA.
☆ Financial support: The study was supported in part by grants from American Diabetes Association (02-07-JF-02; 05-07-02, to L. Cai), from Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, International (5-2006-382) and from the Chinese-American Research Institute for Diabetic Complications, Wenzhou Medical College to L. Cai and X.K. Li.