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Mechanisms of Renal Protection with Volatile Anesthetics

$360,755R01FY2015GMNIH

Columbia University Health Sciences, New York NY

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Abstract

DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a major unresolved clinical problem with an extremely high mortality with a cost of more than 10 billion dollars per year in the United States. Renal ischemia reperfusion (IR) injury is the leading cause of perioperative AKI and frequently complicates major vascular, cardiac and liver surgeries. We previously demonstrated that volatile anesthetics including isoflurane administered after renal ischemia protected against IR injury in part by the synthesis of transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-ß1) in proximal tubule cells. However, the downstream cellular signaling events generated by TGF-ß1 remain incompletely understood. The overall objective of this proposal is to develop novel therapeutics that protect against ischemic AKI by identifying the signaling events generated by volatile anesthetic-mediated TGF-ß1 synthesis. Exciting new preliminary data suggest that the volatile anesthetic agent isoflurane stimulates renal proximal tubular 5'-ectonucleotidase (CD73) to convert extracellular ATP to adenosine which in turn generates the cytoprotective cytokine IL-11 in renal proximal tubular and endothelial cells. This is highly significant as recent studies showed that extracellular ATP released by necrotic cells after IR further promotes inflammation and cell death. Accordingly, our central hypothesis is that volatile anesthetics protect against renal IR injury by inducing renal IL-11 via stimulation of CD73. We will mechanistically link together for the first time several major downstream cytoprotective signaling pathways generated by volatile anesthetics and TGF-ß1 (CD73, adenosine and IL-11). As volatile anesthetics are frequently used drugs during the perioperative period, our findings of isoflurane-mediated CD73 modulation and IL-11 generation (a formulation of IL-11 is already clinically available for other applications) have important and novel clinical implications for organ protection beyond the kidney. Our preliminary data lead us to pursue three specific aims that will test our central hypothesis. Aim #1: To define the role of CD73 in volatile anesthetic-mediated protection against ischemic AKI. Aim #2: To determine the role of IL-11 in volatile anesthetic-mediated protection against ischemic AKI. Aim #3: To develop IL-11 based therapy against ischemic AKI. Our translational approach aims to provide conceptual advances regarding how volatile anesthetics confer renal protection by adenosine and IL-11 generation. The major innovations of the proposal include the novelty of the volatile anesthetic-mediated signaling events identified and the significance of the unsolved clinical problem that it addresses. As such, our proposal may identify novel therapeutic targets (e.g., IL-11) and novel therapeutics (polyethylene glycol-conjugated IL-11) to reduce complications of AKI and lead to a radical reduction in mortality and morbidity.

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