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Asprosin, a prospective biomarker for rhabdomyolysis-induced acute kidney damage in rats: involvement of PKA/TGF-β1/SMAD-3 signaling pathway

Article

Last updated: 01 Jan 2025

Subjects

-

Tags

Physiology

Abstract

Background: Rhabdomyolysis is a primary skeletal muscle disruption syndrome with circulatory leakage of its intracellular contents and is seriously complicated by acute kidney injury (AKI). Asprosin is a novel glucogenic adipokine expressed in several tissues, including the kidneys, and has been implicated in some renal disorders via many pathogenic mechanisms. Material & Methods: 32 rats were divided equally into the control group, the calcitriol-treated group, the glycerol-treated group, and the glycerol+calcitriol-treated group. Blood, urine, and renal tissue samples were collected for biochemical, histological, immunohistochemical, and gene investigations. Results: Rats given glycerol had elevated levels of asprosin, creatine kinase, creatinine, BUN, renal MDA, IL-6, caspase-3, and caspase-9, as well as PKA mRNA, TGF-β1, and SMAD-3. While creatinine clearance, renal SOD, and catalase were decreased. Marked histopathological changes imply sever renal injury, faint PAS-positive reaction, strong positive immunoreaction for iNOS and TGF-β were found. These changes were reversed in glycerol+calcitriol-treated rats. Asprosin positively correlated with MDA, IL-6, caspase-3, caspase-9, mRNA levels of PKA, TGF-β1and SMAD-3, while it negatively correlated with SOD, and catalase. Conclusion: Serum asprosin levels are increased in rhabdomyolysis-induced AKI and calcitriol protect against AKI via suppressing asprosin and its dependent PKA-TGF-β1-SMAD-3 signaling pathway.

DOI

10.21608/zumj.2023.209146.2796

Keywords

rhabdomyolysis, asprosin, Acute kidney injury, TGF-β 1

Authors

First Name

Sama

Last Name

Khalil

MiddleName

Salah

Affiliation

Medical Physiology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University

Email

dr.samakhalil@gmail.com

City

Zagazig

Orcid

0000-0001-8225-234

First Name

Samaa

Last Name

Abd El-Fatah

MiddleName

Salah

Affiliation

Assistant Professor, Human Anatomy and Embryology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University

Email

samaasalah12@yahoo.com

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Maha

Last Name

Fathy

MiddleName

Abdelhamid

Affiliation

Medical physiology department-Faculty of medicine-Zagazig university

Email

y_maha_m@hotmail.com

City

zagazig

Orcid

0000-0003-0131-3001

First Name

N

Last Name

Elwany

MiddleName

E.

Affiliation

Lecturer, Clinical Pharmacology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University

Email

naalwan@medicine.zu.edu.eg

City

-

Orcid

0000-0003-0008-8228

First Name

Enssaf

Last Name

Ahmad

MiddleName

Ahmad

Affiliation

Lecturer, Human Anatomy and Embryology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University

Email

eaabdelhamid@medicine.zu.edu.eg

City

-

Orcid

0000-0003-0660-1942

First Name

Noura

Last Name

Mohamed

MiddleName

Mostafa

Affiliation

Medical biochemistry department-Faculty of medicine-Zagazig university

Email

nouramostafa25@yahoo.com

City

zagazig

Orcid

-

First Name

Marwa

Last Name

Habib

MiddleName

A

Affiliation

Medical Physiology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Zagazig University

Email

marwahabib2015@gmail.com

City

-

Orcid

0000-0001-7788-7592

Volume

29

Article Issue

4

Related Issue

42216

Issue Date

2023-07-01

Receive Date

2023-05-05

Publish Date

2023-07-01

Page Start

1,146

Page End

1,160

Print ISSN

1110-1431

Online ISSN

2357-0717

Link

https://zumj.journals.ekb.eg/article_300512.html

Detail API

https://zumj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=300512

Order

21

Type

Original Article

Type Code

273

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Zagazig University Medical Journal

Publication Link

https://zumj.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Asprosin, a prospective biomarker for rhabdomyolysis-induced acute kidney damage in rats: involvement of PKA/TGF-β1/SMAD-3 signaling pathway

Details

Type

Article

Created At

30 Dec 2024