Impact of nephrotoxins and oxidants on survival and transport function of hiPSC-derived renal proximal tubular cells
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Due to their role in excretion, renal proximal tubule cells are susceptible to damage by toxic metabolites and xenobiotics. The regenerative capacity of the kidney allows for the replacement of damaged cells, a process involving differentiation programs. However, kidney function tends to decline, suggesting that the replacement cells may not achieve full functionality. To understand possible causes of this decline, we investigated effects of nephrotoxins and oxidants on the differentiation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) into proximal tubular epithelial-like cells (PTELC). Proliferation, apoptosis, senescence and expression of oxidative defense genes were analyzed in iPSCs, differentiating and differentiated cells treated with cisplatin (CisPt, up to 45 µM), cyclosporin A (CycA, up to 12 µM) and the oxidants menadione (Mena, up to 50 µM) and tert-butylhydroquinone (tBHQ, up to 50 µM). We found that differentiating cells were most sensitive to oxidants and showed increased sensitivity to CisPt, whereas all differentiation stages showed similar sensitivity to CycA. Both oxidative stress and CisPt triggered apoptosis in all differentiation stages, whereas CycA mainly induced senescence. Treatment during differentiation resulted in long-term effects on gene expression in differentiated cells. While oxidants had no effect on transport function of differentiated cells, CisPt and CycA impaired albumin uptake. Our data suggest a substantial sensitivity of differentiating cells to nephrotoxins and oxidants, an aspect that could potentially interfere with regenerative processes.