Mechanisms of apoptosis and its potential role in renal tubular
epithelial cell injury.
Lieberthal, Wilfred, and Jerrold S. Levine.
Renal section, Evans Memorial Department of Clinical Research and
Department of Medicine, Boston University Medical Center Hospital,
Boston, Massachusetts, 02118
APStracts 3:0117F, 1996.
Cells can die by two distinct pathways: apoptosis or necrosis.
Necrosis is associated with rapid metabolic collapse that leads to
cell swelling, early loss of plasma membrane integrity, and ultimate
cell rupture. Cytosolic contents leak from the necrotic cell causing
injury and inflammation to surrounding tissue. In contrast, apoptosis
is an energy-requiring, gene-directed process which, when activated,
results in cell "suicide". The morphologic and biochemical
characteristics of cells dying by apoptosis differ markedly from
those of cells dying by necrosis. During apoptosis, cells decrease in
size and round up. The nuclear chromatin undergoes condensation and
fragmentation. The apoptotic cell then breaks apart into many plasma
membrane-bound vesicles called "apoptotic bodies", which
contain fragments of condensed chromatin and morphologically intact
organelles such as mitochondria. Apoptotic cells and bodies are
rapidly phagocytosed, thereby protecting surrounding tissues from
injury. The rapid and efficient clearance of apoptotic cells makes
apoptosis extremely difficult to detect in tissue sections. Recent
studies show that multiple cytotoxic stimuli well known to cause
necrosis can lead to apoptosis instead when cells are exposed to the
same noxious agents at lower concentrations. This insight has led to
an interest in the role of apoptosis in the pathogenesis of renal
diseases that result primarily from injury to renal tubular
epithelial cells. These diseases include acute and chronic renal
failure from exposure of the kidney to ischemia or to cytotoxic
agents. In this review we discuss some relevant aspects of the
differences between necrotic and apoptotic cell death. We also
present evidence to support the hypothesis that apoptosis is an
important pathogenic mechanism in those forms of acute and chronic
renal failure in which the renal tubular epithelial cell is the
primary target of ischemic or toxic injury.
Received 15 March 1996; accepted in final form 13 June 1996.
APS Manuscript Number F85-6.
Article publication pending Am. J. Physiol. (Renal Fluid Electrolyte
Physiology).
ISSN 1080-4757 Copyright 1996 The American Physiological Society.
Published in APStracts on 25 July 1996