Background/Aims: In oxidative stress, heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) plays a pivotal role in maintaining renal function and protecting renal structure, especially in renal tubular epithelial cells. We examined urinary HO-1 (uHO-1) levels to assess whether uHO-1 acts as a sensitive biomarker for detecting tubulointerstitial inflammatory damage in renal diseases. Methods: Immunohistochemical analyses and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for uHO-1 were performed using 61 urine samples (supernatants and sediment lysates) from healthy children and renal disease patients. Results: Proximal and distal epithelial cells showed higher uHO-1 levels than squamous and urothelial cells. Inflammatory renal disease patients had higher uHO-1 levels than noninflammatory renal disease patients and controls. In IgA nephropathy, patients with interstitial cellular infiltration showed higher uHO-1 levels than those without it. Among patients with increased urinary β2-microglobulin or N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminidase levels, uHO-1 levels increased only in those with renal disease and tubulointerstitial inflammatory damage. uHO-1 levels positively correlated with urinary interleukin-6 in inflammatory renal disease patients. Conclusions: These results indicate that uHO-1 is a potentially useful, novel, and noninvasive biomarker for evaluating the degree of tubulointerstitial inflammatory damage in renal disease.
This is the first report showing that rotavirus infects the urinary sediment cells in immunocompetent children with rotavirus gastroenteritis. We found that inclusion-bearing cells were frequently detected in the urine samples of patients with rotavirus gastroenteritis. These cells were positive for cytokeratin, which was sometimes coexpressed with rotavirus antigen, in our immunohistochemical analysis. Moreover, in nested RT-PCR experiments, we detected rotavirus double-stranded RNA in some urine samples of patients with rotavirus gastroenteritis. We concluded that rotavirus could lead to infection of the urinary sediment cells concomitantly with rotavirus gastroenteritis.
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