Kidney injury molecule-1: a tissue and urinary biomarker for nephrotoxicant-induced renal injury
Brigham and Women's Hospital · Harvard University
Abstract
Nephrotoxicity is a common side effect of therapeutic interventions, environmental insults, and exposure to toxicants in the workplace. Although biomarkers for nephrotoxicity are available, they often lack sensitivity and are not specific as indicators of epithelial cell injury. Kidney injury molecule-1 (Kim-1) is a type 1 membrane protein with extracellular immunoglobulin and mucin domains. The mRNA and protein for Kim-1 are expressed at very low levels in normal rodent kidney, but expression increases dramatically after injury in proximal tubule epithelial cells in postischemic rodent kidney and in humans during ischemic acute renal failure. To evaluate the utility of Kim-1 as a biomarker for other types of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 15.26
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 41
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Kidney
- Nephrotoxicity
- Urinary system
- Acute kidney injury
- Biomarker
- Lipocalin
- Pathology
- Creatinine