Abstract

Reactive oxygen intermediates play a role in chronic renal injury and glomerulosclerosis. We investigate changes in renal cortex antioxidant enzyme gene expression in the rat remnant-kidney model of chronic renal failure and compare the new data to enzyme activities published earlier. Antioxidant enzyme gene expression is evaluated by Northern blot analysis of cortex mRNA, using cDNA probes for catalase, copper/zinc-containing superoxide dismutase, and glutathione peroxidase. Catalase gene expression decreases during development of renal failure; this decrease is accompanied by decreased catalase activity during the glomerulosclerosis phase of the remnant-kidney model. Copper/zinc superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase gene expression remain at a normal level during progression of the model, whereas their activities show a temporary decrease in the early remnant kidney. In the remnant-kidney model, catalase seems to be more vulnerable to reactive oxygen intermediates than superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase. Our results show that antioxidant enzyme activity and gene expression do not change in the same direction at all times during disease development and that all antioxidant enzymes do not respond in the same way.

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