Aims/hypothesis
The selective CuII chelator triethylenetetramine (TETA) extracts systemic CuII into the urine of diabetic humans and rats as a model of diabetes, and in the process also normalises hallmarks of diabetic
heart disease. However, the role of Cu and its response to TETA in animals with diabetic nephropathy were previously unknown.
Here, we report the effects of TETA treatment on Cu and other essential elements, as well as on indices of renal injury and
known pathogenic molecular processes, in kidneys from a rat model of diabetes.
Methods
Rats at 8 weeks after streptozotocin-induction of diabetes were treated with oral TETA (34 mg/day in drinking water) for a
further 8 weeks and then compared with untreated diabetic control animals.
Results
Renal tissue Cu was substantively elevated by diabetes and normalised by TETA, which also suppressed whole-kidney and glomerular
hypertrophy without lowering blood glucose. The urinary albumin: creatinine ratio was significantly elevated in the rat model
of diabetes but lowered by TETA. Total collagen was also elevated in diabetic kidneys and significantly improved by TETA.
Furthermore, renal cortex levels of TGF-β1, MAD homologue (SMAD) 4, phosphorylated SMAD2, fibronectin-1, collagen-III, collagen-IV,
plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 and semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase all tended to be elevated in diabetes and normalised
by TETA.
Conclusions/interpretation
Dysregulation of renal Cu homeostasis may be a key event eliciting development of diabetic nephropathy. Selective CuII chelation can protect against pathogenic mechanisms that lead to or cause diabetic nephropathy and might be clinically useful
in the treatment of early-stage diabetic kidney disease.
Keywords Albuminuria - Diabetic nephropathy - Divalent copper - Extracellular matrix - Glomerular hypertrophy - Semicarbazide-sensitive amine oxidase - SSAO - TGF-β - Triethylenetetramine
This manuscript is dedicated to the memory of D. J. Scott—inspirational diabetologist, teacher and humanist.