Abstract

Acute kidney injury causes deterioration of liver function, that is a confounding factor affecting treatment outcomes. In this work, renal ischemia reperfusion injury was used as a model. Taking into account that hyperproduction of reactive oxygen species is the major risk factor for kidney damage, the exogenous antioxidant enzyme peroxiredoxin 6, able to neutralize reactive oxygen species, has been used to prevent liver damage when kidneys are damaged. Kidney injury was initiated by a 45-minute ischemia simultaneously with a left-sided donor nephrectomy without manipulations of the liver. Peroxiredoxin 6 was administered intravenously 15 minutes before ischemia. The functional state of the liver was assessed after 2, 5 and 24 hours of reperfusion using histological and biochemical analysis. The signs of liver damage were detected in the best possible way after 5 hours of kidney reperfusion. It was found that peroxiredoxin 6 helps reduce the severity of the vascular reaction and leukocyte infiltration in the liver; lower the level of dystrophy and apoptosis of hepatocytes; keep the concentration of TBA-reactive products even and stabilize the level of cytokines, IL-6 and IL-10, in the liver tissue, as well as normalize the activity of intracellular transferases in the blood at the onset of reperfusion. The protective effect of peroxiredoxin 6 is associated primarily with its antioxidant properties, due to which hyperproduction of reactive oxygen species can be neutralized in the early phase of kidney reperfusion, but the signal-regulatory function of the protein can also contribute to a protective role peroxiredoxin 6.

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