Uric Acid and Oxidative Stress—Relationship with Cardiovascular, Metabolic, and Renal Impairment
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Uric Acid Synthesis
- White crystals or powder aspect,
- A molar weight of 168.11 g/mol,
- A heavy atom count of 12,
- A melting point >300 °C,
- A water solubility of 60 mg/L (at a temperature of 20 °C).
- Adenine pathway:
- ○
- Adenosine monophosphate (AMP) is converted by nucleotidase into adenosine, which is further converted by purine nucleoside phosphorylase into adenine, which, through deamination, is degraded to hypoxanthine.
- ○
- AMP can also present a deamination reaction, being converted into inosine monophosphate (IMP), which is converted by nucleotidase into inosine, which is further degraded by purine nucleoside phosphorylase into hypoxanthine.
- ○
- The resulting hypoxanthine, under the action of xanthine oxidase, is converted to xanthine.
- Guanine pathway:
- ○
- Guanosine monophosphate (GMP) is converted by nucleotidase into guanosine, which is further converted by purine nucleoside phosphorylase into guanine, which, through deamination, is degraded to xanthine.
- ○
- GMP can also present a deamination reaction, being converted into xanthosine monophosphate (XMP), which is converted by nucleotidase into xanthosine, which is further degraded by purine nucleoside phosphorylase into xanthine.
- The resulting xanthine, through adenine and guanine pathway, under the action of xanthine oxidase, is oxidized to uric acid, which in the normal human body’s physiological conditions, exists as urate, with the following normal range of levels, which are different for men and women: 2.5–7.0 mg/dL in male gender and 1.5–6.0 mg/dL in female gender, respectively. Furthermore, the urate is easily transformed to allantoic acid and ammonia, allowing its renal excretion (almost 200–300 mg/day).
3. Uric Acid Rich Diets
4. Possible Genetic Disorders Involved in Uric Acid Over-Synthesis
5. Uric Acid Excretion
- Most of the urate is excreted by the kidneys (only one-third is gastro-intestinally eliminated), which involves three phases: filtration, reabsorption, and secretion; knowing that it is not bound to the proteins, it is easily ultra-filtrated by the glomeruli. In the proximal renal tubules, most of it is reabsorbed (~95–98%), and then, secretion occurs, with 10% of filtered uric acid being further excreted by the kidneys [33].
- These processes of urate elimination and regulation are influenced by different proteins/transporters:
- ○
- URAT1 (urate transporter 1)—it belongs to the organic anion transporter (OAT) family and is a urate exchanger in the apical region of the proximal renal tubules, being encoded by SLC22A12 (solute carrier family 22, organic anion/urate transporter, member 12) gene. It is responsible for the urate reabsorption, therefore having an important key role in maintaining serum UA normal values.
- ○
- BCRP (breast-cancer-resistance protein)—a transporter encoded by ABCG2 (adenosine triphosphate binding cassette subfamily G member 2) gene that recently was observed to have an essential contribution in urate excretion. In CKD, high urate levels induce a more active intestinal transporter of UA through ABCG2 increased expression and/or functionality [34].
- ○
- GLUT9 (glucose transporter 9)—a transporter for urate, with similar roles as URAT1, located in the basolateral region of the proximal renal tubules.
- ○
- SGLT2 (sodium-glucose transporter 2)—recent data suggested its contribution in transporting urate and consequent involvement in its excretion.
6. Pathogenic Potential of Serum Uric Acid in Renal Impairment
7. Bimodal Role of Uric Acid in Oxidative Balance
8. Oxidative Stress and Uric Acid
9. Non-Interventional Studies Focused on Uric Acid
10. Mendelian Randomized Studies Focused on Uric Acid
11. Available Treatment Option for Lowering Uric Acid
- Estradiol and Losartan are also URAT1 and GLUT9 inhibitors, whereas Fenofibrate acts only through URAT1 inhibition [99]. Despite higher prevalence of CKD in women, a recent study from nationwide Swedish Renal Registry—CKD evidenced that males are prone to a higher eGFR decline. Apparently, more and more studies sustain that sex hormones, especially estrogen, exerts renal and cardiovascular protective proprieties. This may also be a reason for lower levels of uric acid in women [100].
- Vitamin E is a nutrient lipid soluble with pleiotropic benefits in protecting the integrity of cell membranes through ROS scavengers and by blocking the chain of oxidative reactions [101].
- Vitamin C or ascorbic acid and NO are involved in a complex relationship. It has been suggested that ascorbic acid is a potent antioxidant and reduces serum UA levels by increasing urinary excretion, inhibiting AU synthesis, and by directly decreasing ROS-derived cell damage. Flavonoids and other polyphenols due to their anti-oxidative capacity act like superoxide and XO inhibitors, resulting in suppression of ROS and UA synthesis [102].
- ʟ-Arginine and N-Acetylcysteine also known as strong antioxidants and have shown repeatedly good results in efficient anti-oxidative properties in CKD. ʟ-Arginine is a substrate for NO synthesis [17].
- An NHANES study in 14,758 subjects sustained that only tea and coffee consumption was associated with low levels of serum UA [103].
12. Interventional Studies Focused on Uric Acid
Current Guidelines Recommendations
- In 2020, the Guideline for Management of Gout by the American College of Rheumatology (ACR) recommended initiating urate-lowering therapy for gout patients with more than one subcutaneous tophus, evidence of radiographical damage attributable to gout, or frequent gout flares (>2 per year) [121].
- Japanese guidelines for gout recommended to treat asymptomatic hyperuricemia in patients with UA serum level over 8 mg/dL and complications, such as CKD, urolithiasis, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus, and metabolic syndrome, or in patients with UA serum level over 9 mg/dL [122].
- In 2017, EULAR recommendations for gout management suggested Allopurinol as first-line treatment. If target UA level could not be managed (serum UA < 6 mg/dL), the use of Febuxostat or other uricosuric agent was indicated. As third line, a combination of uricosuric and XO inhibitor was suggested. Pegloticase was recommended only for refractory gout [123].
13. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study | Studied Medication | Included Subjects | Results |
---|---|---|---|
Agarwal et al. (2012, meta-analysis) [107] | Allopurinol vs. placebo 1:1 | 10 clinical trials with n = 738 subjects with eGFR < 60 mL/min | 3.3 mmHg BP reduction in placebo group |
Goicoechea et al. (2010) [108] | Allopurinol vs. placebo 1:1 | n = 113 with eGFR < 60 mL/min | Significant reduction of CRP level eGFR 1.3 mL/min/24 months increment |
Golmohammadi et al. (2017) [109] | Allopurinol vs. placebo 1:1 | n = 216 with eGFR 15–60 mL/min | Reduction of CKD decline with a mean difference of 1 mL/min/year |
Bose et al. (2014, meta-analysis) [110] | Allopurinol vs. placebo 1:1 | 8 clinical trials with n = 476 with eGFR < 60 mL/min | Mean eGFR retarded by 3.3 mL/min/year in 5 from 8 studies |
Lee et al. (2019) [111] | Allopurinol vs. Febuxostat vs placebo ½:½:1 | n = 141, mean eGFR baseline = 42.1 mL/min | Febuxostat significant decreased UA level and maintain eGFR significant higher for 4 years in contrast to Allopurinol or placebo |
Zhang et al. (2019) [112] | Febuxostat vs. Allopurinol 1:1 | n = 152 with CKD stage 2–3 | Febuxostat showed superiority in eGFR decline but not in proteinuria or uric acid control |
Hsu et al. (2020, meta-analysis) [113] | Febuxostat vs. Allopurinol 1:1 | n = 6057 with CKD stage 5 | Lower risk of progression to dialysis on febuxostat group |
Liu et al. (2018, meta-analysis) [115] | Uric-acid-lowering therapy | 12 clinical trials with 832 CKD subjects | 8 trials showed a mean serum creatinine reduction by −0.63 |
Sampson et al. (2017, meta-analysis) [116] | Uric-acid-lowering therapy | 12 clinical trials with 1187 CKD subjects | Conflicting evidence—no apparent benefits in eGFR, blood pressure, or proteinuria control |
Su et al. (2017, meta-analysis) [117] | Uric-acid-lowering therapy | 16 clinical trial with 1211 CKD subjects | eGFR progression retarded by 4.1 mL/min/year 55% reduced risk of AKI 60% reduced risk in cardiovascular events |
Chen et al. (2020, meta-analysis) [118] | Uric-acid-lowering therapy | 28 trials with 6458 CKD subjects | No benefits in kidney failure or cardiovascular events |
Lin et al. (2019, meta-analysis) [120] | Febuxostat vs. placebo | 11 trials with 1317 CKD stage 3–4 subjects | Reno-protective effects with a mean difference in eGFR of 3.6 mL/min |
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Gherghina, M.-E.; Peride, I.; Tiglis, M.; Neagu, T.P.; Niculae, A.; Checherita, I.A. Uric Acid and Oxidative Stress—Relationship with Cardiovascular, Metabolic, and Renal Impairment. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23, 3188. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23063188
Gherghina M-E, Peride I, Tiglis M, Neagu TP, Niculae A, Checherita IA. Uric Acid and Oxidative Stress—Relationship with Cardiovascular, Metabolic, and Renal Impairment. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2022; 23(6):3188. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23063188
Chicago/Turabian StyleGherghina, Mihai-Emil, Ileana Peride, Mirela Tiglis, Tiberiu Paul Neagu, Andrei Niculae, and Ionel Alexandru Checherita. 2022. "Uric Acid and Oxidative Stress—Relationship with Cardiovascular, Metabolic, and Renal Impairment" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 23, no. 6: 3188. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23063188
APA StyleGherghina, M. -E., Peride, I., Tiglis, M., Neagu, T. P., Niculae, A., & Checherita, I. A. (2022). Uric Acid and Oxidative Stress—Relationship with Cardiovascular, Metabolic, and Renal Impairment. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 23(6), 3188. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23063188