4.7 Article

Sub-nephrotoxic doses of gentamicin predispose animals to developing acute kidney injury and to excrete ganglioside M2 activator protein

Journal

KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 78, Issue 10, Pages 1006-1015

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1038/ki.2010.267

Keywords

gentamicin; GM2AP; nephrotoxicity; sensitization to acute kidney injury; urinary markers

Funding

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III [Retic 016/2006, PI081900]

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We studied whether nephrotoxic drug administration sensitizes to acute renal failure (ARF) by administering a sub-nephrotoxic dose of gentamicin. This pre-treatment sensitized animals with no sign of renal injury to develop ARF when exposed to a second potential nephrotoxic drug, also given at sub-nephrotoxic doses that would be otherwise harmless to non-sensitized animals. We identified urinary ganglioside M2 activator protein (GM2AP) as a biomarker of an enhanced sensitivity to suffer ARF following subnephrotoxic treatment with gentamicin. Sub-nephrotoxic gentamicin did not alter renal GM2AP gene expression or protein levels, determined by reverse transcriptase-PCR, western blot, and immunostaining, nor was its serum level modified. The origin of increased GM2AP in the urine is thought to be a defective tubular handling of this protein as a consequence of gentamicin action. Hence, markers of acquired sensitivity may improve the prevention of ARF by enhancing our capacity to monitor for this condition, in a preemptive manner.

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