Nitric oxide in kidney transplantation
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Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy
Abstract
Kidney transplantation is the treatment of choice for patients with kidney failure. Compared to dialysis therapy,
it provides better quality of life and confers significant survival advantage at a relatively lower cost. However,
the long-term success of this life-saving intervention is severely hampered by an inexorable clinical problem
referred to as ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI), and increases the incidence of post-transplant complications
including loss of renal graft function and death of transplant recipients. Burgeoning evidence shows that nitric
oxide (NO), a poisonous gas at high concentrations, and with a historic negative public image as an environ mental pollutant, has emerged as a potential candidate that holds clinical promise in mitigating IRI and pre venting acute and chronic graft rejection when it is added to kidney preservation solutions at low concentrations
or when administered to the kidney donor prior to kidney procurement and to the recipient or to the reperfusion
circuit at the start and during reperfusion after renal graft preservation. Interestingly, dysregulated or abnormal
endogenous production and metabolism of NO is associated with IRI in kidney transplantation. From experi mental and clinical perspectives, this review presents endogenous enzymatic production of NO as well as its
exogenous sources, and then discusses protective effects of constitutive nitric oxide synthase (NOS)-derived NO
against IRI in kidney transplantation via several signaling pathways. The review also highlights a few isolated
studies of renal graft protection by NO produced by inducible NOS.
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Research Article
