Cellular Response to Hyperosmotic Stresses
National Heart Lung and Blood Institute
Abstract
Cells in the renal inner medulla are normally exposed to extraordinarily high levels of NaCl and urea. The osmotic stress causes numerous perturbations because of the hypertonic effect of high NaCl and the direct denaturation of cellular macromolecules by high urea. High NaCl and urea elevate reactive oxygen species, cause cytoskeletal rearrangement, inhibit DNA replication and transcription, inhibit translation, depolarize mitochondria, and damage DNA and proteins. Nevertheless, cells can accommodate by changes that include accumulation of organic osmolytes and increased expression of heat shock proteins. Failure to accommodate results in cell death by apoptosis. Although the adapted cells survive and…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.24
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 359
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Osmolyte
- Osmotic shock
- Tonicity
- Cell biology
- Osmotic concentration
- Apoptosis
- Chemistry
- Transcription factor