doi:10.1369/jhc.6A6932.2006
Volume 54 (10): 1149-1157, 2006 Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc. Tubular Stress Proteins and Nitric Oxide Synthase Expression in Rat Kidney Exposed to Mercuric Chloride and Melatonin
Division of Human Anatomy, Department of Biomedical Sciences and Biotechnology, University of Brescia, Brescia, Italy (AS,FR,RR,GLV,EB,RB,LFR), and Laboratory of Electron Microscopy, Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale della Lombardia ed Emilia-Romagna, Brescia, Italy (AL) Correspondence to: Alessandra Stacchiotti, Division of Human Anatomy, Department of Biomedical Sciences and Biotechnology, University of Brescia, Viale Europa 11, I-25123 Brescia, Italy. E-mail: stacchio{at}med.unibs.it
Stress proteins such as HSP70 members (HSP72 and GRP75) and metallothionein (MT) protect the kidney against oxidative damage and harmful metals, whereas inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) regulates tubular functions. A single dose of mercuric chloride (HgCl2) can cause acute renal failure in rats, its main target being the proximal tubule. Oxidative damage has been proposed as one of its pathogenic mechanisms. In this study we tested whether melatonin (MEL), a powerful antioxidant compound, is effective against HgCl2 nephrotoxicity. Rats were treated with saline, HgCl2 (3.5 mg/kg), MEL (5 mg/kg), and MEL + HgCl2 and examined after 24 hr for HSP72, GRP75, MT, and iNOS by immunohistochemistry and immunoblotting. Tubular effects of the treatment were then characterized by ultrastructure. In the HgCl2 group, all markers were overexpressed in convoluted proximal tubules and sometimes in distal tubules. In the MEL + HgCl2 group, GRP75 and iNOS decreased in convoluted and straight proximal tubules, whereas HSP72 and MT persisted more than the saline and MEL-only groups. Tubular damage and mitochondrial morphometry were improved by MEL pretreatment. In conclusion, the beneficial effect of MEL against HgCl2 nephrotoxicity was outlined morphologically and by the reduction of the tubular expression of stress proteins and iNOS. These markers could represent sensitive recovery index against mercury damage. (J Histochem Cytochem 54:11491157, 2006)
Key Words: mercury nephrotoxicity melatonin stress proteins nitric oxide synthase
CELLS AND ORGANISMS have developed a common extraordinary mechanism called the "stress proteins response" to resist a wide variety of stress (Kultz 2005
Nitric oxide is a gas generated from L-arginine by nitric oxide synthase (NOS) that regulates glomerular hemodynamics, the release of sympathetic neurotransmitters, renin (Kone 2004
The kidney is a favorite target for several pollutants (Van Vleet and Schnellmann 2003
Melatonin (MEL), the main pineal hormone, is a potent free-radical scavenger that stimulates antioxidant enzymes and maintains mitochondrial functions (Reiter et al. 2004
In a recent immunohistochemical study in rat kidneys, we showed that HgCl2 induced specific stress proteins that were strictly related to mitochondrial abnormalities (Stacchiotti et al. 2004 To confirm the preventive efficacy of MEL on mercury nephrotoxicity, we specifically focused on the tubular localization and abundance of three stress proteins (HSP72, GRP75, and MT) and iNOS. For defining the effects of treatment in S3 segment we used electron microscopy, whereas we used ultrastructural morphometry to determine mitochondrial size and density. We hypothesized that if antioxidant MEL was beneficial, stress proteins and iNOS distribution in proximal convoluted and straight tubules and mitochondrial damage would be reduced.
Animals Fifty male adult Sprague Dawley rats (Charles River; Milan, Italy) weighing 230250 g were housed in a controlled environment (12 h light/12 h dark cycle at 20C, relative humidity 50%) and fed with a standard diet and water ad libitum. All treatments began almost 1 week after arrival. Animals were cared for according to national regulations for the protection of laboratory animals (D.M.116192) and EU regulations (L358/112/18/1986). The Italian Ministry of Health approved all procedures.
Experimental Design
Immunohistochemistry For quantitative analysis of immunostaining intensity in mid-cortical proximal tubules, we blindly computed the integrated optical density (IOD) and measured 10 samples for each experimental group. Digitally fixed images were analyzed at x200 magnification using an Olympus (Hamburg, Germany) light microscope equipped with an image analyzer (Image Pro Plus; Milan, Italy). IOD was calculated for arbitrary areas (20 arbitrary areas/samples, 1000 x 1500 µm), each sample being the same size. All data were a mean value, and statistical analysis was applied to compare the results from the various experimental groups.
SDS-PAGE and Western Blot Analysis
Electron Microscopy
Morphometric and Statistical Analysis
Because the data obtained were similar for both the saline- and ethanol-5%-treated groups, we decided to consider them without distinction and to report only the saline group data as the "control group." All immunohistochemical controls were negative, and representative pictures are shown in Figures 1L 1N.
Stress Protein Distribution In the corticomedullary junction, HSP72 was barely detectable in the control and after MEL-only administration (Figure 1A). It was also strongly induced in the mercury-treated rats in the nuclei of proximal tubules (Figure 1B) and was maintained in the cytoplasm of disrupted proximal tubules after MEL coadministration (Figure 1C). MT immunostaining was faint and occasionally nuclear in mid-cortical tubules in control and MEL-only treated groups (Figure 1D) but became intense in the cytoplasm of altered proximal tubules after mercury exposure, often outlining the apical side and the lumen (Figure 1E). After MEL coadministration, the MT pattern was moderate and diffuse in the affected proximal tubules (Figure 1F). GRP75 signal was faint and basolateral in control and MEL only cortical tubules (Figure 1G), but after mercury exposure, became strong and often translocated into the nuclei (Figure 1H). After MEL supply, there was a moderate signal in the cytoplasm of proximal tubules at the corticomedullary junction (Figure 1I).
iNOS
Quantitative Analysis of the Immunostaining
Immunoblotting Analysis of Renal Extracts In rats treated with HgCl2, the effects of MEL supply on the renal abundance of HSP72 protein are shown in Figure 4 , GRP75 and MT in Figure 5 , and NOS isoforms in Figure 6 . Overall amount of these markers was almost in agreement with the immunohistochemical results.
In HSP72 immunoblotting, the band was narrow in control and MEL-only-treated groups. Considering that it is an inducible protein, it became thicker in mercury-treated group and persisted after MEL supply (Figure 4A). For GRP75 and MT, a similar amount was detected in the control and MEL-only-treated groups, whereas after mercury treatment larger bands were detected that decreased after MEL coadministration (Figure 5A). Finally, an iNOS immunoblotting analysis was made: the iNOS band was higher after mercury exposure and lower after MEL supply, very similar to control and MEL-only-treated groups (Figure 6A). Densitometric data representative of immunoblotting analysis are included under their relative bands in Figures 4B, 5B, and 6B.
Ultrastructural and Morphometric Analysis
Morphometric data on mitochondria in different experimental groups are summarized in Table 1 . Total mitochondrial area and density both increased in mercury-exposed rats vs MEL-only-treated rats. However, after MEL pretreatment, all parameters decreased and, in particular, mitochondrial density was not statistically different from the control groups.
HgCl2 induces acute renal failure in humans and experimental animals (Clarkson 1997
Stress proteins are universally conserved proteins that are a reliable index of repair in injured renal cells (Van de Water et al. 2006 The main findings of our study were as follows: 1) MEL pretreatment reduced stress proteins and iNOS expressions within proximal convoluted and straight tubules affected by mercury; 2) MEL improved tubular morphology, in particular the mitochondrial shape and density within S3 segment, the main mercury target.
HSP72, a cytoplasmic-inducible protein, enhanced with the progression of mercury nephrotoxicity (Goering et al. 2000
Another important marker of tubular impairment that greatly influences acute renal failure is iNOS (Goligorsky et al. 2002 In conclusion, we confirmed that MEL is beneficial against experimental HgCl2 nephrotoxicity. Its antioxidant effect is corroborated by reduced expression of a mitochondrial chaperone, GRP75, and iNOS in rat proximal convoluted tubules. Remarkably, the tubular persistence of stress proteins such as HSP72 and MT might be a compensatory reaction to speed up recovery. In addition, maintenance of regular morphology and mitochondrial size and density in S3 segments were shown by ultrastructure and morphometry after MEL supply. These results are encouraging although further studies are needed to clarify the mechanism of MEL in acute toxic renal failure before it can be applied as a preventive tool.
This study was supported by local institutional grants (M.U.R.S.T. 60% from Ministero Università e Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica). The authors thank Ms. Stefania Castrezzati and Mr. Giovanni Bozzoni for expert technical assistance in electron microscopy and digital microscopy. The text was linguistically revised by Dott. R. Coates of the Centro Linguistico dell'Università di Brescia.
Received for publication January 24, 2006; accepted June 13, 2006
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