Title
Dietary fructose causes tubulointerstitial injury in the normal rat kidney
Date Issued
01 March 2010
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Nakayama T.
Kosugi T.
Gersch M.
Connor T.
Sanchez-Lozada L.G.
Lanaspa M.A.
Roncal C.
Johnson R.J.
Nakagawa T.
Mateo Orfila Hospital-Minorca
Publisher(s)
American Physiological Society
Abstract
Recent studies suggest that the metabolic syndrome is associated with renal disease. We previously reported that a high-fructose diet, but not a high-glucose diet, can induce metabolic syndrome and accelerate chronic renal disease in rats. We now examined the effects of a high-fructose diet on normal rat kidneys. Three groups of Sprague-Dawley rats were pair fed a special diet containing 60% fructose, 60% glucose, or control standard rat chow for 6 wk, and then histological studies were performed. The effect of fructose to induce cell proliferation in cultured proximal tubular cells was also performed. Fructose diet, but not glucose diet, significantly increased kidney weight by 6 wk. The primary finding was tubular hyperplasia and proliferation involving all segments of the proximal tubules while glomerular changes were not observed. This is the same site where the fructose transporters (GLUT2 and -5) as well as the key enzyme in fructose metabolism (ketohexokinase) were expressed. Consistently, fructose also induced proliferation of rat proximal tubular cells in culture. In vivo, tubular proliferation was also associated with focal tubular injury, with type III collagen deposition in the interstitium, an increase in α-smooth muscle actin positive myofibroblasts, and an increase in macrophage infiltration. In conclusion, a high-fructose diet induces cell proliferation and hyperplasia in proximal tubules, perhaps via a direct metabolic effect. The effect is independent of total energy intake and is associated with focal tubulointerstitial injury. These studies may provide a mechanism by which metabolic syndrome causes renal disease.
Start page
F712
End page
F720
Volume
298
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Patología
Urología, Nefrología
Fisiología
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-77649117984
PubMed ID
Source
American Journal of Physiology - Renal Physiology
ISSN of the container
1931857X
Sponsor(s)
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute R01HL068607 NHLBI
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus