Gender-biased kidney damage in mice following exposure to tobacco cigarette smoke: More protection in premenopausal females

Abstract

Multiple clinical studies documented renal damage in chronic cigarette smokers (CS) irrespective of their age and gender. Premenopausal female smokers are known to exert a certain cardiovascular and renal protection with undefined mechanisms. Given the multiple demographic variables within clinical studies, this experimental study was designed to be the first to assess whether gender-biased CS-induced kidney damage truly exists between premenopausal female and age-matched C57Bl6J male mice when compared to their relative control groups. Following 6 weeks of CS exposure, cardiac function, inflammatory marker production, fibrosis formation, total and glomerular ROS levels, and glomerulotubular homeostasis were assessed in both genders. Although both CS-exposed male and female mice exhibited comparable ROS fold change relative to their respective control groups, CS-exposed male mice showed a more pronounced fibrotic deposition, inflammation, and glomerulotubular damage profile. However, the protection observed in CS-exposed female group was not absolute. CS-exposed female mice exhibited a significant increase in fibrosis, ROS production, and glomerulotubular alteration but with a pronounced anti-inflammatory profile when compared to their relative control groups. Although both CS-exposed genders presented with altered glomerulotubular homeostasis, the alteration phenotype between genders was different. CS-exposed males showed a significant decrease in Bowman's space along with reduced tubular diameter consistent with an endocrinization pattern of chronic tubular atrophy, suggestive of an advanced stage of glomerulotubular damage. CS-exposed female group, on the other hand, displayed glomerular hypertrophy with a mild tubular dilatation profile suggestive of an early stage of glomerulotubular damage that generally precedes collapse. In conclusion, both genders are prone to CS-induced kidney damage with pronounced female protection due to a milder damage slope. © 2019 The Authors. Physiological Reports published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society.

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Cigarette smoking, Gender differences, Inflammation, Kidney damage, Oxidative stress, Aging, Animals, Female, Fibrosis, Kidney, Kidney diseases, Male, Mice, Mice, inbred c57bl, Reactive oxygen species, Sex factors, Sexual development, Tobacco smoke pollution, Cigarette smoke, Glyceraldehyde 3 phosphate dehydrogenase, Hydroethidine, Interleukin 10, Interleukin 13, Interleukin 1beta, Interleukin 4, Reactive oxygen metabolite, Transforming growth factor beta, Tumor necrosis factor, Animal experiment, Animal tissue, Article, Body weight variation, Controlled study, Densitometry, Fluorescence microscopy, Fractional shortening, Gender, Glomerulopathy, Heart left ventricle enddiastolic diameter, Heart left ventricle endsystolic diameter, Histopathology, Kidney fibrosis, Kidney injury, Kidney tubule disorder, Mouse, Nephritis, Nonhuman, Periodic acid schiff stain, Premenopause, Protein expression, Scoring system, Transthoracic echocardiography, Western blotting, Adverse event, Animal, C57bl mouse, Kidney disease, Metabolism, Passive smoking, Pathology, Pathophysiology, Physiology, Sex factor

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