The Role of Advanced Glycation End Products and Its Soluble Receptor in Kidney Diseases
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Analytical Aspects
3. Chronic Kidney Disease
4. Diabetic Nephropathy
5. Atherosclerosis
6. Lupus Nephritis
7. Renal Amyloidosis
8. Acute Kidney Injury
9. Transplantation
10. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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AGE | Potential Working Mechanisms in Kidney Diseases | Ref. |
---|---|---|
CEL |
| [46] |
CML |
| [25,47,48,49,50] |
Furosine |
| [51,52,53] |
MetSOX |
| [54] |
MG-H1 |
| [55] |
Pentosidine |
| [1,2] |
Study Design | Study Participants | Types of Detection Method | End Point | Key Findings | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cohort study | 64 older individuals (70% male, median age of 81 years, 63% DM, steady eGFR (27 ± 10 mL/min/1.73 m2) | AGEs: fluorescence spectrophotometry sRAGE: ELISA (Human RAGE DuoSet, R&D) | To evaluate the association between the amount in variations in AGEs and sRAGE, and eGFR. | Mean AGEs levels remained nearly the same with rather steady eGFR, although sRAGE isoforms decreased significantly (p < 0.0001). AGEs/sRAGE ratios rose (p = 0.004), but variations in AGEs and RAGEs isoforms were not associated with changes in eGFR. | [9] |
Cohort study | 111 advanced CKD patients (CKD stages 3b to 5, not yet on dialysis) | AGEs: fluorescence spectrophotometry sRAGE (Human RAGE DuoSet, R&D)/cRAGE (∆(sRAGE-esRAGE)/esRAGE (B-Bridge International K1009-1): ELISA | To explore the role of AGE, glycated albumin, sRAGE and its different forms, as prognostic factors for mortality. | eGFR correlated negatively with AGE, sRAGE, esRAGE and cRAGE. No differences were observed between diabetic and non-diabetic patients. AGE, esRAGE, and cRAGE/esRAGE were independently associated with all-cause mortality. | [10] |
Cohort study | 123 ESKD including HD (n = 56) and PD patients (n = 67) | sRAGE: ELISA (Human RAGE DuoSet, R&D) | To explore whether sRAGE may be a predictor of mortality in ESKD. | A rise in sRAGE levels of 100 pg/mL was linked with a substantial increase in mortality risk of roughly 7%. A positive correlation between sRAGE and BNP was found. | [11] |
Cross-sectional study | 548 older community-dwelling women (51.6% with eGFR < 60 mL/min/1.73 m2) | AGEs (CML): ELISA sRAGE: ELISA (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D) | To characterize the relationship between AGEs and RAGE with CVD mortality. | Increased serum CML and sRAGE were independently linked with lower eGFR and seemed to predict reduced eGFR | [56] |
Cross-sectional study | 1874 participants | AGEs (CML): ELISA sRAGE (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D)/esRAGE (B-Brigde International): ELISA | To evaluate associations of AGE-CML, sRAGE and esRAGE with demographics, DM, hyperglycemia, cardiometabolic measures, and genetic variants in the AGER gene. | DM was not linked with serum AGE-CML, sRAGE, or esRAGE after adjusting for baseline demographic variables and BMI. Black race and AGER genetic variations were highly related to lower sRAGE and esRAGE concentrations. eGFR, albuminuria, and CKD risk based on eGFR and albuminuria stages were linked to increased levels of AGE-CML, sRAGE, and esRAGE. Fructosamine and glycated albumin were linked with AGE-CML. AGE-CML and sRAGE were linked to genetic, renal, and inflammatory markers rather than DM. | [57] |
Case-control study | 88 ESKD patients and 20 healthy controls | AGEs: ELISA (Oxiselect AGE, STA-817, Cell Biolabs) sRAGE: ELISA (Human RAGE DuoSet, R&D) | To investigate the higher increases in serum levels of AGEs compared to increases in sRAGE, the correlation between the levels of AGEs with sRAGE, and the increase in the ratio of AGEs/sRAGE in patients with ESKD. | The AGEs levels were 6.75 times higher in ESKD patients compared to the controls. The rise in AGE levels was 2–3.23 times greater than the increase in sRAGE levels. A negative connection was discovered between sRAGE and the AGEs/sRAGE ratio; the latter might be used as a general biomarker for ESKD. | [58] |
Cohort study | 1634 HD patients | AGEs: spectrofluorometric and SAF | To investigate the association of serum and tissue AGEs with all-cause and CVD mortality | There was a positive relation of baseline tissue AGE levels with all-cause and CVD mortality, independent of circulating AGEs and other important confounders. | [59] |
Case-control study | 261 stable HD patients and 100 unrelated Caucasian healthy people | sRAGE: ELISA (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D) | To evaluate sRAGE, inflammatory, and nutritional parameters, and to determine AGER polymorphisms. | A negative relationship between residual diuresis and acute-phase reactants (fibrinogen and orosomucoid) was found. sRAGE levels were linked to kidney functions, AGEs, and inflammatory markers, and could be altered genetically. The greatest sRAGE levels were reported in AGER gene polymorphisms 429 CC and 2184 GG. sRAGE levels were not linked to mortality. | [60] |
Cohort study | 199 HD patients | sRAGE: ELISA (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D) | To evaluate the relationship between sRAGE and S100A12 and mortality. | sRAGE was adversely linked with vascular calcification scores but not with inflammatory markers. Plasma sRAGE and S100A12 were not linked with mortality. | [61] |
Case-control study | 200 CKD stage 5 patients with initiation of dialysis (CKD-G5D) (median age: 56 years, 62% men and median GFR of 6.2 mL/min/1.73 m2), 58 HD patients,78 PD patients, 56 CKD stage 3–4 patients and 50 community-based control subjects | sRAGE: ELISA (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D) | To investigate plasma S100A12 and sRAGE, biomarkers of inflammation and nutritional status, and comorbidities and to assess associations between mortality risk and S100A12 or sRAGE. | Plasma concentrations of sRAGE, S100A12, and the ratio S100A12/sRAGE were significantly higher in CKD-G5D, CKD stage 3–4, HD and PD patients. Median level of sRAGE was higher in CKD-G5D patients compared to patients with CKD stage 3–4. sRAGE was adversely associated with GFR, but not with hsCRP, comorbidities, or mortality. | [62] |
Case-control study | 81 patients (25 patients of CKD stage 1–4, 20 long-term HD patients, 15 PD patients, and 21 healthy age-matched subjects) | sRAGE: ELISA (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D) | To describe the relationship of sRAGE to kidney function and dialysis modalities. | Serum sRAGE levels increased in patients with decreased kidney function, mainly patients with ESKD. | [63] |
Cohort study | 107 T2DM patients including those on HD | AGEs (CML and pentosidine): ELISA (FSK, Fushimi Pharmaceutical) esRAGE: ELISA (B-Bridge International) | To investigate the role of esRAGE and to determine whether serum esRAGE levels are associated with serum AGEs levels. | In uremia, an elevated sRAGE level may imply an increased RAGE expression within a counter-regulatory mechanism against vascular endothelial injury. | [64] |
Case-control study | 82 prevalent PD patients (median age: 65 years; 70% men), 190 HD patients (median age: 67 years; 56% men), and 50 control participants (median age: 63 years; 62% men) | sRAGE: ELISA (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D) | To assess associations between mortality risk and concentrations of S100A12 and sRAGE. | Median S100A12, sRAGE, and S100A12/sRAGE were significantly higher than in controls, with S100A12 being 1.9 times higher and median sRAGE being 14% lower in HD patients. | [65] |
Study Design | Study Participants | Types of Detection Method | End Point | Key Findings | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cohort study | ACCORD (n = 1150) and VADT (n = 447), T2DM patients | AGEs: LC-MS | To evaluate the association of a multicomponent AGE panel with decline in kidney function and its utility in predicting RFL. | The data provided further support for a causal role of AGEs in DN independently of glycemic control and suggested utility of the composite AGE panel in the prediction of long-term decline in kidney function. | [6] |
Cohort study | ONPN (n = 14), NHS (n = 110), Pima Indians (n = 45), three populations with DM | - | To examine the relationship of methylglyoxal, 3-deoxyglucosone, and oxidative stress levels to DN risk. | Progression of DN was significantly related to elevated dicarbonyl stress and possibly related to oxidative stress in three separate populations, suggesting that these factors play a role in determining individual susceptibility. | [34] |
Cohort study | 103 subjects with T1DM | AGEs: LC MS-MS | To investigate the relationship between AGEs, oxidation products, and progression of DN. | Fast progressors had considerably higher levels of MG-H1, CEL, and CML than slow progressors. MG-H1 was found to be a substantial independent predictor of rapid progressors. The findings imply that the three main AGEs may be early indications of the advancement of significant DN damage. | [35] |
Cohort study | 169 American Indians with T2DM and early stage DN (mean eGFR > 90 mL/min, and mean uACR 31 mg/g) from the Gila River Indian Community | AGEs: LC-MS | To examine associations of AGEs with RFL and its structural determinants. | Serum AGEs predicted RFL. AGEs improved prediction of RFL and its major structural correlates. | [36] |
Case-control study | Tissue studies: 9 diabetic patients and 18 non-diabetic patients Clinical studies: 20 diabetic patients (6 undergoing HD patients) and 10 non-diabetic patients with ESKD requiring HD, and 8 healthy subjects | AGEs: radioreceptor assay | To elucidate the relation of AGEs to diabetic complications. | AGEs accumulated at a faster-than-normal rate in arteries and the circulation of patients with DM. The increase in circulating AGE peptides paralleled the severity of functional kidney impairment in DN. | [83] |
Cohort study | 466 participants | AGEs: LC-MS | To assess impact of glycemic control on plasma AGEs and their association with subsequent microvascular disease. | MetSOX was linked to DKD at TP1. A positive relation between fructose-lysine and CML and albuminuria was discovered when age, BMI, DM duration, and mean updated HbA1c were taken into account. | [84] |
Case-control study | 150 CKD stage 3–5 patients and 64 non-CKD patients | sRAGE: ELISA (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D) | To investigate the effect of glycemic control on the levels or activities of sRAGE in CKD patients. | Glycemic control did not quantitatively alter sRAGE in diabetic CKD patients. The presence of CKD may negate the impact of glycemic management on enzymatic antioxidant activity and sRAGE levels. | [85] |
Cross-sectional study | 76 CKD-G5D patients (32 HD and 44 PD patients, median age 62.41 years) of which 24 with DM (T1DM: n = 2; T2DM: n = 22) and 54 without DM | sRAGE: ELISA (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D) | To evaluate the existence of any potential association between AGEs, FGF-23, inflammation, and increased CV risk in CKD-G5D patients and to explore the potential role of sRAGE as a marker of heart failure. | sRAGE levels were higher in DM CKD-G5D patients compared to non-DM CKD-G5D patients. Its elevation may be a possible preventive mechanism against increased risk of CV problems associated with AGEs and inflammation. | [86] |
Cohort study | 3725 patients (mean eGFR: 82.6 ± 21.3 mL/min/1.73 m2, median uACR: 2.2 (0.8–8.8) mg/mmol) | AGEs: SAF | To investigate the association between SAF and progression of kidney disease. | Higher SAF values were associated with progression of kidney disease and with the eGFR slope in T2DM, after adjustment for established risk factors. | [87] |
Study Design | Study Participants | Types of Detection Method | End Point | Key Findings | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cohort study | 200 CKD stage 5 patients (62% men, median of 56 years, and median GFR of 6.2 mL/min/1.73 m2) starting on dialysis. | sRAGE: ELISA (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D) | To assess associations between mortality risk and sRAGE after a median follow-up period of 23 months. | sRAGE does not seem to be a valid risk marker in this CKD stage 5 patient population. | [62] |
Case-control study | 58 HD, and 78 PD patients after 1 year of dialysis, 56 CKD stage 3–4 patients and 50 community-based control subjects | sRAGE: ELISA (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D) | To compare sRAGE levels in different patients. | sRAGE plasma concentrations are markedly elevated in CKD stage 5 patients starting on dialysis, as well as in CKD stage 3–4 patients and prevalent dialysis patients. CKD stage 5 patients had higher median level of sRAGE than the CKD stage 3–4 patients. | [62] |
Case-cohort study | 151 CKD patients (eGFR < 60 mL/min/1.73 m2 and ≥ 25% eGFR decline), 152 ESKD patients, and 1218 healthy patients | sRAGE: ELISA sRAGE: ELISA (Quantikine human RAGE, R&D) | To examine the association between sRAGE and kidney disease. | High sRAGE levels were associated with the development of CKD and ESKD risk, but not after adjustment for kidney function at baseline. | [97] |
Cross-sectional study | Ambulatory adult patients (n = 51) with CKD stages 1 through 5 and without DM | AGEs: ELISA (CML and MG) RAGE (mRNA): SYBRTM Green real-time PCR assay | To examine the association of AGE accumulation with cellular RAGE expression and endothelial dysfunction as well as the mechanisms of this association in CKD. | RAGE mRNA expression rises in the presence of high amounts of circulating AGEs, resulting in up-regulation of RAGE synthesis. | [98] |
Case-control study | 285 transplant recipients (mean age: 52 years), 32 dialysis patients (mean age: 56 years), 231 normal healthy subjects (mean age: 51 years) | AGEs: SAF | To evaluate AGE levels. | Kidney transplantation does not fully correct increased AGE levels found in dialysis patients. Increased AGE levels in kidney transplant recipients cannot be explained by the differences in kidney function alone. | [99] |
Cohort study | 70 patients in the AAA group (55 men and 15 women, mean age: 70.25 years), 20 patients in the AIOD group (14 men and 6 women, mean age: 63.78 years), and 85 CKD patients (CKD stage 3–4) and 35 HD patients | AGEs: ELISA (Oxiselect AGE, STA-817, Cell biolabs) sRAGE: ELISA (RayBio) | To identify the relationship between AGEs, sRAGE, and AGE/sRAGE in selected atherosclerosis diseases: AAA, AIOD, and CKD. | The CKD patients had substantially greater quantities of AGEs and sRAGE than the patients with AAA and AIOD. sRAGE was considerably higher in CKD stage 5 patients than in CKD stage 3–4 patients. Significantly higher AGEs/sRAGE ratio was also seen in HD patients compared to those with AAA and AIOD. | [100] |
Case-control study | 6 patients with ESKD and DM, 8 patients with ESKD and without DM, and 8 patients without ESKD and without DM | AGEs: immunohistochemistry | To study the accumulation of AGEs and apolipoprotein B in the human aortas in diabetic and non-diabetic subjects with ESKD. | It is suggested that impaired AGE clearance may cause the increased accumulation of AGEs in the aortic wall of subjects with ESKD, thus resulting in rapid progression of atherosclerosis. | [101] |
Case-control study | 142 CKD patients (average eGFR of 32 mL/min/1.73 m2) and 49 healthy control individuals matched for age and gender | sRAGE: ELISA (Human RAGE DuoSet, R&D) | To determine the relationship between plasma sRAGE and carotid atherosclerosis. | Plasma sRAGE was significantly higher in patients with CKD than in the control cohort. In CKD patients, significant inverse relationships were found for sRAGE to IMT and plaque number. The slopes of IMT and plaque number to sRAGE were significantly steeper in patients with CKD. For predicting atherosclerotic plaques in patients with CKD, a significant interaction was found between sRAGE and smoking. | [102] |
Case-control study | 142 patients with average eGFR of 32 mL/min/1.73 m2 and 49 healthy control individuals matched for age and gender | sRAGE: ELISA (Human RAGE DuoSet, R&D) | To study the relationship between plasma sRAGE with LVH in CKD patients. | sRAGE is an inverse marker of LVH in CKD patients. | [103] |
Study Design | Study Participants | Types of Detection Method | End Point | Key Findings | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Case-control study | 630 kidney transplant patients and 41 healthy kidney donors | AGEs: GC-MS | To investigate the associations of urinary AGEs with mortality. | Median urinary excretion rates of CML and CEL were lower pre-donation but higher post-donation. Lower urinary CML and furosine excretion rates were linked to increased all-cause mortality in kidney transplant recipients. Reduced urinary furosine excretion rates were linked to increased CV mortality. Urinary furosine excretion rate was inversely related to nephropathy, whereas urinary CML excretion rate was related to prednisolone. | [4] |
Case-control study | 285 transplant recipients (mean age: 52 years), 32 dialysis patients (mean age: 56 years), and 231 normal control subjects (mean age: 51 years) | AGEs: SAF | To evaluate AGE levels in the skin. | SAF revealed a substantial decrease in AGE levels in kidney transplant recipients compared to dialysis patients. However, fluorescence levels in transplant patients remained significantly higher than in healthy controls. A negative correlation between fluorescence levels and creatinine clearance was found after transplantation. | [99] |
Case-control study | 6 patients with ESKD and DM, 8 patients with ESKD and without DM, and 8 patients without ESKD and without DM | AGEs: immunohistochemistry | To study the accumulation of AGEs and apolipoprotein B in the human aortas of diabetic and non-diabetic subjects with ESKD. | It is suggested that impaired AGE clearance may cause the increased accumulation of AGEs in the aortic wall of subjects with ESKD, resulting in rapid progression of atherosclerosis. | [101] |
Case-control study | 28 healthy controls, 11 conservatively treated children with CRI, all dialyzed children with CRI (HD: n = 8 or PD: n = 18), and 9 children after kidney transplantation | AGEs: fluorimetry and ELISA (CML) | To investigate the pattern of AGE accumulation in children/adolescents with CRI and on renal replacement therapy by dialysis and after transplantation. | Enhanced fluorescent AGEs and CML levels were found in children/adolescents with CRI and on dialysis. Successful kidney transplantation decreased but did not normalize AGE levels. This probably because of an impaired kidney function with enhanced oxidative stress. | [123] |
Cohort study | 555 stable kidney transplant recipients (mean age: 51 years, 56% men) | AGEs: UPLC-MS-MS | To investigate the association between circulating AGEs and long-term risk of CV mortality. | CML and CEL concentrations were directly associated with CV mortality, independent of traditional CV risk factors. | [124] |
Cohort study | 285 consecutive kidney transplant recipients (57% male, mean age: 50 years) | AGEs: SAF | To investigate which factors are associated with tissue AGE accumulation in kidney transplant recipients. | Age, smoking, systolic blood pressure, hsCRP, plasma vitamin C concentrations, pre-transplant dialysis duration, creatinine clearance at baseline, and change in creatinine clearance at baseline 12 months after transplantation were all found to be independently associated with AGE elevation in kidney transplant recipients. | [125] |
Case-control study | 128 patients with kidney or kidney-pancreas transplantation (diabetic recipients of a kidney-pancreas transplant: n = 38; diabetic recipients of a kidney-only transplant: n = 44; non-diabetic recipients of a kidney transplant: n = 46) and 26 healthy volunteers | AGEs: HPLC-fluorescence detection | To determine the effects of correcting hyperglycemia and/or kidney failure on the accumulation of pentosidine. | Prior to transplantation, plasma pentosidine concentrations in kidneys and kidney-pancreas transplant candidates were 20–35 times higher than in healthy controls. Following transplantation, plasma pentosidine levels decreased significantly. More than two years after transplantation, plasma levels of pentosidine remained more than thrice higher than in healthy people. | [126] |
Cohort study | 20 T1DM patients undergoing pancreas–kidney transplantation | AGEs: ELISA AGE (Oxiselect AGE, STA-817, Cell Biolabs) and CML (Oxiselect CML, STA-816, Cell Biolabs) | To study AGE evolution after pancreas–kidney transplantation. | A transitory rise in CML levels is found after transplantation, followed by a drop in CML levels beginning 3 months after transplantation. Mean CML values decreased considerably when comparing CML levels at the beginning to CML levels 12 months after transplantation. | [127] |
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Steenbeke, M.; Speeckaert, R.; Desmedt, S.; Glorieux, G.; Delanghe, J.R.; Speeckaert, M.M. The Role of Advanced Glycation End Products and Its Soluble Receptor in Kidney Diseases. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23, 3439. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23073439
Steenbeke M, Speeckaert R, Desmedt S, Glorieux G, Delanghe JR, Speeckaert MM. The Role of Advanced Glycation End Products and Its Soluble Receptor in Kidney Diseases. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2022; 23(7):3439. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23073439
Chicago/Turabian StyleSteenbeke, Mieke, Reinhart Speeckaert, Stéphanie Desmedt, Griet Glorieux, Joris R. Delanghe, and Marijn M. Speeckaert. 2022. "The Role of Advanced Glycation End Products and Its Soluble Receptor in Kidney Diseases" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 23, no. 7: 3439. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23073439
APA StyleSteenbeke, M., Speeckaert, R., Desmedt, S., Glorieux, G., Delanghe, J. R., & Speeckaert, M. M. (2022). The Role of Advanced Glycation End Products and Its Soluble Receptor in Kidney Diseases. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 23(7), 3439. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23073439