Sphingosine: a mediator of acute renal tubular injury and subsequent cytoresistance.

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The goal of this study was to determine whether sphingosine and ceramide, second messengers derived from sphingolipid breakdown, alter kidney proximal tubular cell viability and their adaptive responses to further damage. Adult human kidney proximal tubular (HK-2) cells were cultured for 0-20 hr in the presence or absence of sphingosine, sphingosine metabolites (sphingosine 1-phosphate, dimethylsphingosine), or C2, C8, or C16 ceramide. Acute cell injury was assessed by vital dye exclusion and tetrazolium dye transport. Their subsequent impact on superimposed ATP depletion/Ca2+ ionophore-induced damage was also assessed. Sphingosine (> or = 10 microM), sphingosine 1-phosphate, dimethylsphingosine, and selected ceramides (C2 and C8, but not C16) each induced rapid, dose-dependent cytotoxicity. This occurred in the absence of DNA laddering or morphologic changes of apoptosis, suggesting a necrotic form of cell death. Prolonged exposure (20 hr) to subtoxic sphingosine doses (< or = 7.5 microM) induced substantial cytoresistance to superimposed ATP depletion/Ca2+ ionophore-mediated damage. Conversely, neither short-term sphingosine treatment (< or = 8.5 hr) nor 20-hr exposures to any of the above sphingosine/ceramide derivatives/metabolites or various free fatty acids reproduced this effect. Sphingosine-induced cytoresistance was dissociated from the extent of cytosolic Ca2+ loading (indo-1 fluorescence), indicating a direct increase in cell resistance to attack. We conclude that sphingosine can exert dual effects on proximal renal tubular viability: in high concentrations it induces cell necrosis, whereas in low doses it initiates a cytoresistant state. These results could be reproduced in human foreskin fibroblasts, suggesting broad-based relevance to the area of acute cell injury and repair.

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