Abstract

Kidney mesangial cells (MCs) and vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) are closely related in terms of origin, microscopic anatomy, histochemistry, and contractility. This relationship suggests a similarity between kidney glomerular sclerosis and atherosclerosis. Vitamin E appears beneficial in the prevention and treatment of coronary heart disease and it also inhibits the proliferation of VSMCs in vitro. Thus, we investigated the effect of vitamin E on glomerular sclerosis and MC-proliferative glomerulonephritis (GN) in two rat models of glomerular disease. A remnant kidney rat model accelerated with hyperlipidemia was used to examine progressive glomerular sclerosis leading to chronic renal failure. A rat model of MC-proliferative GN was induced by the intravenous administration of absorbed rabbit anti-rat thymocyte serum (ATS). In the remnant kidney rat model, dietary supplementation with vitamin E (500 IU dl-alpha-tocopheryl acetate/kg) and cholesterol (2%) significantly inhibited glomerular sclerosis and macrophage infiltration in glomeruli relative to controls receiving basal and cholesterol-supplemented diets. In the ATS-induced GN model, glomerular cell proliferation (principally MCs) was lower in rats fed diets supplemented with vitamin E (1000 IU dl-alpha-tocopheryl acetate/kg) compared with controls fed the basal diet only. Although the degree of glomerular macrophage infiltration was similar in both groups, fewer proliferative cell nuclear antigen (PCNA)-positive cells were observed in the vitamin E group, suggesting that MC proliferation was suppressed via the inhibition of intracellular transduction. Supplemental dietary vitamin E suppresses MC proliferation and glomerular sclerosis in models of glomerular disease in rats. This action of vitamin E in experimental nephritis suggests the value of clinical trials testing the potential benefit of vitamin E in chronic GN patients.

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