Intestinal Microbiota in Experimental Acute Kidney Injury

Recent studies have demonstrated an important role played by gut microbiota in maintaining intestinal homeostasis and host immune system function. Gut microbiota have been studied in experimental acute kidney injury (AKI) using different mice and rat models exposed to either ischemia or cisplatin-me...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nephron (2015) 2023-02, Vol.147 (1), p.25-30
Hauptverfasser: Shah, Neal, Rabb, Hamid
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Recent studies have demonstrated an important role played by gut microbiota in maintaining intestinal homeostasis and host immune system function. Gut microbiota have been studied in experimental acute kidney injury (AKI) using different mice and rat models exposed to either ischemia or cisplatin-mediated tubular injury. Differences in inflammatory markers and severity of AKI have been observed between germ-free mice, wild-type mice, and mice treated with antibiotics or specific bacteria. Interventions modifying the gut microbiota after experimental AKI have had either beneficial or harmful effects on kidney tubular injury and recovery. These findings provide strong evidence for a modulatory role of gut microbiota during AKI. Ischemic and cis­platin-induced AKI have distinct stool microbial signatures based on 16s sequencing. Future in-depth studies exploring the mechanisms of how the microbiota influence AKI and development of feasible therapeutic options have the potential to improve outcomes in clinical AKI.
ISSN:1660-8151
2235-3186
2235-3186
DOI:10.1159/000526265