4.7 Article

Specific BK Channel Activator NS11021 Protects Rat Renal Proximal Tubular Cells from Cold Storage-Induced Mitochondrial Injury In Vitro

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 9, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom9120825

Keywords

mitochondria; transplantation; kidney; cold storage; oxidative stress; respiration; mitoBK channel; NS11021

Funding

  1. American Heart Association [16PRE30830010]
  2. National Institute of General Medical Sciences T32 [GM106999]
  3. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Kidneys from deceased donors used for transplantation are placed in cold storage (CS) solution during the search for a matched recipient. However, CS causes mitochondrial injury, which may exacerbate renal graft dysfunction. Here, we explored whether adding NS11021, an activator of the mitochondrial big-conductance calcium-activated K+ (mitoBK) channel, to CS solution can mitigate CS-induced mitochondrial injury. We used normal rat kidney proximal tubular epithelial (NRK) cells as an in vitro model of renal cold storage (18 h) and rewarming (2 h) (CS + RW). Western blots detected the pore-forming alpha subunit of the BK channel in mitochondrial fractions from NRK cells. The fluorescent K+-binding probe, PBFI-AM, revealed that isolated mitochondria from NRK cells exhibited mitoBK-mediated K+ uptake, which was impaired 70% in NRK cells subjected to CS + RW compared to control NRK cells maintained at 37 degrees C. Importantly, the addition of 1 mu M NS11021 to CS solution prevented CS + RW-induced impairment of mitoBK-mediated K+ uptake. The NS11021-treated NRK cells also exhibited less cell death and mitochondrial injury after CS + RW, including mitigated mitochondrial respiratory dysfunction, depolarization, and superoxide production. In summary, these new data show for the first time that mitoBK channels may represent a therapeutic target to prevent renal CS-induced injury.

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