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  5. Medications Activating Tubular Fatty Acid Oxidation Enhance the Protective Effects of Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass Surgery in a Rat Model of Early Diabetic Kidney Disease
 
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Medications Activating Tubular Fatty Acid Oxidation Enhance the Protective Effects of Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass Surgery in a Rat Model of Early Diabetic Kidney Disease

Author(s)
Martin, William P.  
Chuah, Yeong H. D.  
Abdelaal, Mahmoud  
Hutter, Michaela  
Godson, Catherine  
Brennan, Eoin  
le Roux, Carel W.  
Docherty, Neil G.  
et al.  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/12755
Date Issued
2022-01-26
Date Available
2022-02-03T14:32:00Z
Abstract
Background: Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery (RYGB) improves biochemical and histological parameters of diabetic kidney disease (DKD). Targeted adjunct medical therapy may enhance renoprotection following RYGB. Methods: The effects of RYGB and RYGB plus fenofibrate, metformin, ramipril, and rosuvastatin (RYGB-FMRR) on metabolic control and histological and ultrastructural indices of glomerular and proximal tubular injury were compared in the Zucker Diabetic Sprague Dawley (ZDSD) rat model of DKD. Renal cortical transcriptomic (RNA-sequencing) and urinary metabolomic (1H-NMR spectroscopy) responses were profiled and integrated. Transcripts were assigned to kidney cell types through in silico deconvolution in kidney single-nucleus RNA-sequencing and microdissected tubular epithelial cell proteomics datasets. Medication-specific transcriptomic responses following RYGB-FMRR were explored using a network pharmacology approach. Omic correlates of improvements in structural and ultrastructural indices of renal injury were defined using a molecular morphometric approach. Results: RYGB-FMRR was superior to RYGB alone with respect to metabolic control, albuminuria, and histological and ultrastructural indices of glomerular injury. RYGB-FMRR reversed DKD-associated changes in mitochondrial morphology in the proximal tubule to a greater extent than RYGB. Attenuation of transcriptomic pathway level activation of pro-fibrotic responses was greater after RYGB-FMRR than RYGB. Fenofibrate was found to be the principal medication effector of gene expression changes following RYGB-FMRR, which led to the transcriptional induction of PPARα-regulated genes that are predominantly expressed in the proximal tubule and which regulate peroxisomal and mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation (FAO). After omics integration, expression of these FAO transcripts positively correlated with urinary levels of PPARα-regulated nicotinamide metabolites and negatively correlated with urinary tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle intermediates. Changes in FAO transcripts and nicotinamide and TCA cycle metabolites following RYGB-FMRR correlated strongly with improvements in glomerular and proximal tubular injury. Conclusions: Integrative multi-omic analyses point to PPARα-stimulated FAO in the proximal tubule as a dominant effector of treatment response to combined surgical and medical therapy in experimental DKD. Synergism between RYGB and pharmacological stimulation of FAO represents a promising combinatorial approach to the treatment of DKD in the setting of obesity.
Sponsorship
Health Research Board
Health Service Executive
Science Foundation Ireland
University College Dublin
Wellcome Trust
Other Sponsorship
Swedish Medical Research Council
European Foundation for the Study of Diabetes/Boehringer Ingelheim European Diabetes Research Programme
Health and Social Care, Research and Development Division, Northern Ireland
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Journal
Frontiers in Endocrinology
Volume
12
Copyright (Published Version)
2022 the Authors
Subjects

Prevention

Clinical research

Genetics

Diabetes

Obesity

Kidney disease

Digestive diseases

Renal and urogenital

DOI
10.3389/fendo.2021.757228
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1664-2392
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ie/
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fendo-12-757228.pdf

Size

19.17 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

4d630f11b14a4625998797405d78a198

Owning collection
Medicine Research Collection
Mapped collections
Conway Institute Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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