Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine whether isolated renal ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) induces renal tumor necrosis factor (TNF) mRNA production, TNF protein expression, or TNF bioactivity and, if so, whether local/early TNF production acts as mediator of ischemia-induced, neutrophil-mediated renal injury. After rats were anesthetized, varying periods of renal ischemia, with or without reperfusion, were induced. Kidney mRNA content (RT-PCR), TNF protein expression (ELISA), TNF bioactivity (WEHI-164 cell clone cytotoxicity assay), and neutrophil infiltration [myeloperoxidase (MPO) assay] were determined. In other animals, renal MPO and serum creatinine were assessed after TNF was neutralized [binding protein (TNF-BP)]. Thirty minutes of ischemia induced renal TNF mRNA. TNF protein expression and bioactivity peaked after 1 h ischemia and 2 h reperfusion, whereas neutrophil infiltration peaked at 4 h reperfusion. TNF-BP neutralized TNF bioactivity, reduced neutrophil infiltration, and protected postischemic function. These results constitute the initial demonstration that 1) early renal tissue TNF expression contributes to neutrophil infiltration and injury after I/R and 2) TNF-BP may offer a new adjunctive therapy in renal preservation prior to planned ischemic insults.

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