Glucose Derivative Induced Vasculopathy in Children on Chronic Peritoneal Dialysis

Author:

Bartosova Maria1ORCID,Zhang Conghui1,Schaefer Betti1,Herzog Rebecca2ORCID,Ridinger David3ORCID,Damgov Ivan1,Levai Eszter145ORCID,Marinovic Iva1ORCID,Eckert Christoph6,Romero Philipp7ORCID,Sallay Peter5ORCID,Ujszaszi Akos8,Unterwurzacher Markus2,Wagner Anja2,Hildenbrand Georg3ORCID,Warady Bradley A.9,Schaefer Franz1,Zarogiannis Sotirios G.110ORCID,Kratochwill Klaus2ORCID,Schmitt Claus Peter1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine (M.B., C.Z., B.S., I.D., E.L., I.M., F.S., S.G.Z., C.P.S.), University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.

2. Christian Doppler Laboratory for Molecular Stress Research in Peritoneal Dialysis, Division of Pediatric Nephrology and Gastroenterology, Department of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Comprehensive Center for Pediatrics, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria (R.H., M.U., A.W., K.K.).

3. Kirchhoff Institute for Physics (D.R., G.H.), University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.

4. ELKH-SE, Pediatrics and Nephrology Research Group, Budapest, Hungary (E.L.).

5. 1st Department of Pediatrics, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary (E.L., P.S.).

6. Institute of Pathology (C.E.), University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.

7. Division of Pediatric Surgery, Department of General, Visceral and Transplantation Surgery (P.R.), University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.

8. Division of Nephrology, Heidelberg University Hospital, Heidelberg, Germany (A.U.).

9. Children’s Mercy Kansas City, Kansas City, MO (B.A.W.).

10. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Thessaly, Larissa, Greece (S.G.Z.).

Abstract

Rationale: Patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have an exceedingly high cardiovascular risk; which further increases in patients on peritoneal dialysis (PD). The pathophysiological role of reactive metabolites accumulating in CKD such as glucose degradation products (GDP) is uncertain. Objective: Delineating the impact of GDP present in PD fluids in accelerated vasculopathy development in patients with CKD. Methods and Results: Omental and parietal peritoneal tissues were obtained from 107 children with CKD before dialysis and 90 children on chronic PD with PD fluids containing very low or high concentrations of GDP. Omental arterioles, protected from local PD fluid exposure by surrounding fat, were microdissected for multiomics analyses. High-GDP exposed omental arterioles exhibited 3-fold higher advanced glycation endproduct concentrations and upregulated genes involved in cell death/apoptosis and suppressed genes related to cell viability/survival, cytoskeleton organization, and immune response biofunctions. Vasculopathy-associated canonical pathways concordantly regulated on gene and protein level with high-GDP exposure included cell death/proliferation, apoptosis, cytoskeleton organization, metabolism and detoxification, cell junction signaling, and immune response. Parietal peritoneal arterioles of patients exposed to high-GDP fluids exhibited lumen narrowing compared to patients with CKD stage 5 (end-stage kidney disease) and patients on low-GDP PD, intima thickness was increased. Protein quantification verified increased proapoptotic activity and cytoskeleton disintegration, single-molecule-localization microscopy demonstrated arteriolar endothelial ZO-1 (zonula occludens-1) disruption. Absolute and per endoluminal surface length, arteriolar endothelial cell counts inversely correlated with GDP exposure, caspase-3, TGF (transforming growth factor)-β–induced pSMAD2/3 (phosphorylated SMAD2/3), interleukin-6, ZO-1 abundance, and lumen narrowing. In vitro, 3,4-dideoxyglucosone-3-ene reduced lamin-A/C and membrane ZO-1 assembly, increased pSMAD2/3, and ionic and 4 and 10 kDa permeability of arterial endothelial cells. Conclusions: Our findings indicate a fundamental role of GDP in PD-associated vasculopathy, exerted by endothelial cell junction and cytoskeleton disruption, and induction of apoptosis. They should redirect the focus of research and intervention on targeting reactive metabolite overload in CKD and PD. Registration: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov ; Unique identifier: NCT01893710.

Funder

European Union Horizon 2020

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

European Nephrology and Dialysis Institute

Austrian Federal Ministry of Science, Research and Economy

National Foundation for Research, Technology and Development

NKP-18-2 New National Excellence Program of the Ministry of Human Capacities

Jellinek-Harry Scholarship

Alexander von Humboldt Stiftung/Foundation

International Peritoneal Dialysis Society

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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