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Sexual Dimorphism in Development of Kidney Damage in Aging Fischer-344 Rats
Institution:1. Department of Urology, Glickman Urological and Kidney Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, OH;2. Department of Surgery, Ratchaburi Hospital, Ratchaburi, Thailand;3. Department of Urology, UCSD, San Diego, CA;1. IRCCS SDN, Via Gianturco 113, 80143 Naples, Italy;2. Shanghai University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Shanghai, People''s Republic of China;3. Department of Internal Medicine, University Hospital Basel, Switzerland;4. Experimental Medicine Department, Sapienza - University of Rome, Rome, Italy;5. McGill University Health Centre Research Institute, Centre for Outcomes Research and Evaluation (CORE), Montreal, Canada
Abstract:BackgroundAging kidneys exhibit slowly developing injury and women are usually protected compared with men, in association with maintained renal nitric oxide.ObjectivesOur purpose was to test 2 hypotheses: (1) that aging intact Fischer-344 (F344) female rats exhibit less glomerular damage than similarly aged males, and (2) that loss of female ovarian hormones would lead to greater structural injury and dysregulation of the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) system in aging F344 rat kidneys.MethodsWe compared renal injury in F344 rats in intact, ovariectomized, and ovariectomized with estrogen replaced young (6 month) and old (24 month) female rats with young and old intact male rats and measured renal protein abundance of NOS isoforms and oxidative stress.ResultsThere was no difference in age-dependent glomerular damage between young or old intact male and female F344 rats, and neither ovariectomy nor estrogen replacement affected renal injury; however, tubulointerstitial injury was greater in old males than in old females. These data suggest that ovarian hormones do not influence these aspects of kidney aging in F344 rats and that the greater tubulointerstitial injury is caused by male sex. Old males had greater kidney cortex NOS3 abundance than females, and NOS1 abundance (alpha and beta isoforms) was increased in old males compared with both young males and old females. NOS abundance was preserved with age in intact females, ovariectomy did not reduce NOS1 or NOS3 protein abundance, and estrogen replacement did not uniformly elevate NOS proteins, suggesting that estrogens are not primary regulators of renal NOS abundance in this strain. Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase-dependent superoxide production and nitrotyrosine immunoreactivity were increased in aging male rat kidneys compared with females, which could compromise renal nitric oxide production and/or bioavailability.ConclusionsThe kidney damage expressed in aging F344 rats is fairly mild and is not related to loss of renal cortex NOS3 or NOS1 alpha.
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