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Oxidative stress and endoplasmic stress in calcium oxalate stone disease: the chicken or the egg?

Journal

FREE RADICAL RESEARCH
Volume 54, Issue 4, Pages 244-253

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10715762.2020.1751835

Keywords

Urolithiasis; hyperoxaluria; oxidative stress; ER stress; calcium oxalate; apoptosis

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Crystal modulators play a significant role in the formation of calcium oxalate stone disease. When renal cells are subjected to oxalate stress, the loss in cell integrity leads to exposure of multiple proteins that assist and/or inhibit crystal attachment and retention. Contact between oxalate and calcium oxalate with urothelium proves fatal to cells as a result of reactive oxygen species generation and onset of oxidative stress. Hence, as a therapeutic strategy it was hypothesised that supplementation of antioxidants would suffice. On the contrary to popular belief, the detection of oxalate induced endoplasmic reticulum mediated apoptosis proved the ineffectiveness of antioxidant therapy alone. Thus, the inadequacy of antioxidant supplementation in oxalate stress invoked the presence of an alternative pathway for the induction of kidney fibrosis in hyperoxaluric rats. In addition to settling this query, the link between oxidative stress and ER stress is not well understood, especially in urolithiasis.

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