4.7 Article

Translocation of mineralo-organic nanoparticles from blood to urine: a new mechanism for the formation of kidney stones?

Journal

NANOMEDICINE
Volume 11, Issue 18, Pages 2399-2404

Publisher

FUTURE MEDICINE LTD
DOI: 10.2217/nnm-2016-0246

Keywords

calcium granules; kidney stones; nanoparticle translocation

Funding

  1. Primordia Institute of New Sciences and Medicine
  2. Chang Gung Medical Research Project [FMRPD2T02, EMRPD1A0961]
  3. Ming Chi University of Technology [0XB0]
  4. National Science Council of Taiwan [101-2632-B-182-001-MY3]

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Recent studies indicate that mineralo-organic nanoparticles form in various human body fluids, including blood and urine. These nanoparticles may form within renal tubules and increase in size in supersaturated urine, eventually leading to the formation of kidney stones. Here, we present observations suggesting that mineralo-organic nanoparticles found in blood may induce kidney stone formation via an alternative mechanism in which the particles translocate through endothelial and renal epithelial cells to reach urine. We propose that this alternative mechanism of kidney stone formation and the study of mineralo-organic nanoparticles in general may provide novel strategies for the early detection and treatment of ectopic calcifications and kidney stones.

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