(*contributed equally to this work) 发布: 2023年05月05日第13卷第9期 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.4670 浏览次数: 672
评审: Komuraiah MyakalaAnonymous reviewer(s)
Abstract
In patients with chronic kidney disease, it is necessary to identify the etiology of glomerular disease. Renal biopsy is the gold standard for assessing the underlying pathology; however, it has the risk of potential complications. We have established a urinary fluorescence imaging technique to assess enzymatic activity using an activatable fluorescent probe targeting two enzymes: gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase and dipeptidyl-peptidase. The urinary fluorescence images can be easily obtained by adding an optical filter to the microscope with short incubation of the fluorescent probes. Urinary fluorescence imaging could help to assess underlying etiologies of kidney diseases and is a potential non-invasive qualitative assessment technique for kidney diseases in patients with diabetes.
Key features
• Non-invasive assessment of kidney disease.
• Urinary fluorescent imaging with enzyme-activatable fluorescent probes.
• Enables differentiation of diabetic kidney disease and glomerulonephritis.
Keywords: Activatable fluorescent probe (可激活荧光探针)Background
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is the major public health burden worldwide. Three major etiologies of CKD leading to end-stage renal disease include diabetic nephropathy, glomerulonephritis, and nephrosclerosis. Although these etiologies can be identified by clinical presentation and laboratory tests in typical cases, some cases require histological assessment to clearly differentiate these diseases, especially in patients with diabetes mellitus. Renal biopsy is the most important procedure to assess the underlying pathologies in CKD. However, it has potential complications such as bleeding, blood transfusion, and loss of renal function. Therefore, a convenient and noninvasive method is warranted for the assessment of kidney disease. Several urinary biomarkers have been suggested to be useful in assessing kidney diseases (Joachim et al., 2021; Takata et al., 2023); however, no biomarkers have been proved to be directly linked to the diagnosis of diabetic kidney disease. Recent advancements in the field of light-emitting substances have opened new approaches for the diagnosis of kidney disease (Huang et al., 2017; Yan et al., 2019). An enzyme-activatable fluorescent probe was recently developed for photodynamic diagnosis (Urano et al., 2011). This technique is based on the fluorescent emittance from hydroxymethyl rhodamine green (HMRG) upon enzymatic reaction with target aminopeptidases, such as gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGTP) and dipeptidyl-peptidase (DPP). While this technique was originally developed for detecting cancer, it can be applied to renal biopsy specimens (Iyama et al., 2020; Takata et al., 2022). Our recent work has focused on investigating the feasibility of the activatable fluorescent probe for noninvasive assessment of the underlying kidney disease (Yamada et al., 2022). Urinary fluorescence was significantly stronger in patients with diabetic nephropathy than those with glomerulonephritis upon DPP-HMRG incubation. Besides, it was stronger in patients with nephrosclerosis compared to those with glomerulonephritis after GGTP-HMRG. Underlying kidney disease can be differentiated by urinary fluorescence imaging in combination with GGTP-HMRG and DPP-HMRG. This study has some limitations regarding the applicability to clinical settings: the results require further confirmation with larger studies, and a quantitative threshold needs to be determined. However, since urinary fluorescence imaging can be easily and quickly obtained, this technique would help to detect kidney diseases, particularly during health checks. We herein present a protocol for the induction of fluorescence by activatable fluorescent probe with some modifications for better clarity of the images.
Materials and Reagents
Pipettes (M&S Instruments, catalog numbers: F144059M, F144058, and F144055M) and pipette tips (VIOLAMO, catalog numbers: V-1000, V-200, and V-10)
1.5 mL Eppendorf centrifuge tubes
Phosphate buffer saline (PBS) (FUJIFILM, catalog number: 166-23555)
Dimethyl sulfoxide (FUJIFILM, catalog number: 041-29351)
EP-HMRG (GORYO Chemical, catalog number: GC811), which targets DPP. Dissolve in dimethyl sulfoxide at 1 mM and store at -20 °C before use (not necessary to filter)
ProteoGREENTM-gGlu (GORYO Chemical, catalog number: GC801), which targets GGTP. Dissolve in dimethyl sulfoxide at 1 mM and store at -20 °C before use (not necessary to filter)
Aqua-auto Kainos CRE-III plus (KAINOS, catalog number: TKA7500), for creatinine measurement
Equipment
Stereomicroscope (BioTools, catalog number: BS-3048BT)
Fluorescent unit (BioTools, catalog number: BT-ExSM)
Band pass filter (FUJIFILM, catalog number: BPB-45). This filter should be set at the light source of the fluorescent unit
Sharp cut filter (FUJIFILM, catalog number: SC-52). This filter should be set at the lens side of the fluorescent unit
Labnet C-1200 mini centrifuge (Marshall Scientific, product code: C-1200)
Procedure
文章信息
版权信息
© 2023 The Author(s); This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).
如何引用
Takata, T., Iyama, T., Yamada, K. and Isomoto, H. (2023). A Novel Non-invasive Qualitative Assay Using Urinary Fluorescence Imaging to Assess Kidney Disease. Bio-protocol 13(9): e4670. DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.4670.
分类
医学
医学
生物科学 > 生物技术
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