Exosomes released by human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells protect against cisplatin-induced renal oxidative stress and apoptosis in vivo and in vitro
Jiangsu University · The First People’s Hospital of Lianyungang · +1 more institution
Abstract
Administration of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) or secreted microvesicles improves recovery from acute kidney injury (AKI). However, the potential roles and mechanisms are not well understood. In the current study, we focused on the protective effect of exosomes derived from human umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells (hucMSC-ex) on cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity in vivo and in vitro.
We constructed cisplatin-induced AKI rat models. At 24 h after treatment with cisplatin, hucMSC-ex were injected into the kidneys via the renal capsule; human lung fibroblast (HFL-1)-secreted exosomes (HFL-1-ex) were used as controls. All animals were killed at day 5 after administration of cisplatin. Renal function, histological changes, tubular apoptosis and proliferation, and degree of oxidative stress were evaluated. In vitro, rat renal tubular epithelial (NRK-52E) cells were treated with or without cisplatin and after 6 h treated with or without exosomes. Cells continued to be cultured for 24 h, and were then harvested for western blotting, apoptosis and detection of degree of oxidative stress.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 25.36
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 33
Authors
14- YZYing ZhouCorresponding
Jiangsu University, The First People’s Hospital of Lianyungang
- HXHuitao Xu
Jiangsu University, The First People’s Hospital of Lianyungang
- WXWenrong Xu
Jiangsu University, Affiliated Hospital of Jiangsu University
- BWBingying Wang
Jiangsu University
- HWHuiyi Wu
The First People’s Hospital of Lianyungang
Topics & keywords
- Microvesicles
- Mesenchymal stem cell
- Umbilical cord
- Oxidative stress
- In vivo
- Stem cell
- Apoptosis
- Cell biology
- Good health and well-being