4.7 Article

Cisplatin nephrotoxicity is mediated by gamma glutamyltranspeptidase, not via a C-S lyase governed biotransformation pathway

Journal

TOXICOLOGY
Volume 249, Issue 2-3, Pages 184-193

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.tox.2008.05.006

Keywords

cisplatin nephrotoxicity; in vivo; rat proximal tubular cell cultures; human proximal tubular cell cultures

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Cisplatin exhibits dose-limiting nephrotoxicity in rodents and man. This study investigates the mechanism of cisplatin nephrotoxicity in vivo and in an in vitro model system. Nephrotoxicity was induced in rats (6 mg/kg cisplatin i.p.) and mice (10 mg/kg cisplatin i.p.). Cisplatin administration significantly elevated blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and serum creatinine in male Sprague Dawley rats day 5 post-treatment (BUN Delta + 28 +/- 5 mu mol/ml; serum creatinine Delta +/- 1084 nmol/ml, P < 0.05) and in male C57BL6 mice day 4 post-treatment (BUN Delta + 21 +/- 4 mu mol/ml; serum creatinine Delta + 81 +/- 5 nmol/ml, P < 0.05). Nephrotoxicity was confirmed by histological analysis that revealed significant damage to the proximal tubules of cisplatin-versus saline vehicle-treated animals. Inhibition of gamma glutamyltranspeptidase prevented cisplatin nephrotoxicity in Sprague Dawley rats (day 5 BUN Delta + 1 +/- 2 mu mol/ml; serum creatinine A + 8 +/- 4 mu mol/ml) and C57131.6 mice (day 4 BUN Delta + 1 +/- 0.8 mu mol/ml: serum creatinine Delta - 1 +/- 2 nmol/ml), but not cellular toxicity in rat proximal tubular (RPT) or human proximal tubular (HPT) cultures. Inhibition of aminopeptidase N (AP-N) or renal dipeptidase (RDP) in male Sprague Dawley rats, or in RPT and HPT cell cultures, did not reduce cisplatin toxicity. In contrast to published findings inhibition of C-S lyase did not prevent the nephrotoxicity of cisplatin in vivo or cellular toxicity in vitro. These data demonstrate that the biotransformation enzymes AP-N, RDP and C-S Iyase are not implicated in the metabolism of cisplatin to a nephrotoxic metabolite as has been previously hypothesised. Instead, our data demonstrate that gamma glutarnyltranspepticlase is a key enzyme involved in mediating cisplatin nephrotoxicity, which potentially acts to cleave cisplatin-GSH conjugates to a toxic metabolite.(C) 2008 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available