Vascular Biology – Hemodynamics – Hypertension

Kidney International (2000) 58, 721–729; doi:10.1046/j.1523-1755.2000.00218.x

Distribution of renal medullary hyaluronan in lean and obese rabbits

Terry M Dwyer, Shandra A Banks, Magdalena Alonso-Galicia1, Kathy Cockrell, Joan F Carroll2, Stephen A Bigler and John E Hall

Departments of Physiology and Biophysics and Pathology, Center for Excellence in Cardiovascular-Renal Research, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi, USA

Correspondence: Terry M. Dwyer, Ph.D., Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi 39216-4505, USA. E-mail: tdwyer@physiology.umsmed.edu

1Current addresses: Department of Physiology, Medical College of Wisconsin, 8701 Watertown Plank Road, Milwaukee, WI 53226, USA.

2Current address: Department of Integrative Physiology, University of North Texas Health Science Center, 3500 Camp Bowie Boulevard, Fort Worth, TX 76116, USA

Received 27 October 1999; Revised 13 January 2000; Accepted 28 February 2000.

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Abstract

Distribution of renal medullary hyaluronan in lean and obese rabbits.

Background

 

Obese individuals have an expanded interstitium in the renal inner medulla (IM), which stains positively with periodic acid-Schiff and Alcian blue. In obese dogs, the IM is also expanded, with hyaluronan (HA) content being 2.4 times control.

Methods

 

We determined the anatomic pattern of renal HA deposition following weight gain, using an animal model of obesity consisting of young rabbits (N = 10), representing animals entering into the study, lean rabbits (N = 19), fed a control diet, and obese rabbits (N = 19), fed a high-fat diet (15% fat, by fortifying with corn oil and lard, in a ratio of 2:1) for two to three months. Tissue was papain digested, and HA was recovered in a phosphate or a Tris buffer and detected by an indirect immunoabsorbent competition assay.

Results

 

Rabbits fed a high-fat diet for 8 to 12 weeks gained weight (37%) and became mildly hypertensive (10 mm Hg). In lean rabbits, HA was low in the renal cortex (6 plusminus 30 mug/g tissue), increased steadily across the outer medulla (OM; 79 plusminus 28 mug/g tissue) and was uniformly high in the IM (192 plusminus 28 mug/g tissue) when recovered in a Tris buffer; these levels of tissue HA did not change during the three-month period of dietary intervention. In obese rabbits, the renal medullary interstitium was expanded and stained intensely with periodic acid Schiff and Alcian blue, and tissue HA was elevated in the IM (448 plusminus 25 mug/g tissue) but not the cortex (5 plusminus 25 mug/g tissue) or the OM (85 plusminus 25 mug/g tissue). The significant difference was due to those IM samples taken from the renal papilla; IM samples from the body of the kidney did not significantly differ among the lean, obese, and young rabbits.

Conclusion

 

The elevated renal HA associated with weight gain is limited to the IM and occurs most consistently in the papilla, which is the region of the kidney that is most vulnerable to distention caused by elevated renal interstitial hydrostatic pressure.

Keywords:

kidney, interstitium, hypertension, blood pressure, weight gain, renal compression

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